The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 269, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 19, 2006 Page: 8 of 16
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Washington. DC
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Nashville
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Forecasts and graphics pro-
vided by AccuWeather,
Inc. ©2006 W
▼ ▼ * Cold front
- - M „ n ESS Showers
* * * Warm front £3 T-storms ____
Stationary front Rain Ice
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for
the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
National Summary___________
Expect showers and thunderstorms to occur today from Arizona northeastward to
Maine along a front. Locally heavy thunderstorms can also rumble along many
coastal areas of the Southeast and Texas.
National Weather for August 19, 2006
| -10s i -08 gMBj 10s j 20s |3»i,,| 40s I 508 ! 60s I 70s I I
103 79 pc
99 74 pc
90 68 pc
. 94 69 pc
101 78 pc San Antonio 100 77 s 100 77 pc
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Galveston 91 82 pc 91 81 t
86 66 pc Houston 97 . 76 pc 97 76 t.
-- ’ • 102 79 pc .....
100 74 s
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95 71 s
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Abilene
Amarillo
Austin
Beaumont
Brownsville
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Today
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94 75 pc 96 75 t Longview
95 77'pc 95 76 pc Lubbock
95 76. pc 96 76 pc Midland
103 80 s 1“ "" " ‘ ■
88 70 t 90 71 t ■ Victoria
102: 80 s 102 77 pc Waco
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7A
With the score 18-8 the
Lady Rangers closed the game
out with seven straight points.
Katie Breazeale started the
run with a kill and as Tadlock
added two kills and
Massengale one. Russell
added an ace to make the
score 24-8 with a Massengale
block bringing an end to the
game.
Sterling started the second.
game off sluggishly early on
allowing Raybum to stay
close at the beginning. With
the score tied 4-4 the Lady
Rangers ripped off four points
to take an 8-4 lead.
Massengale came through
with an ace and a kill in the
mini-run. After Raybum
scored a point to make it 8-5,
Sterling added another six
points in a row. Mason had an
ace and Tara Bell added a kill
in the run.
“After the first game we
thought it was going to be
SWEEP
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7A
’ o
handled Leslie Browder’s
serve to give the Lady Eagles
the game and the match.
“Their was no way I was
going to call a timeout that
last game unless it got to
game point,” Barbers Hill
coach John Leonard said.
“The kids are going to be in
that situation again and I
might not have a timeout.
They’ve got to learn to work
through it.”
Barbers Hill (2-1) won the
first, two games of the night
25-21 and 25-17. BH received '
a big effort from Brittany
RSS
The State
# •
7
about it at all.”
REL will host Baytown
Christian Academy Tuesday
Sterling cruised to a 25-14,
25-17 win over Raybum to
take their record 2-1. Taylor
Ford, Shannon Roberson and
Ashton Rivardo each had
strong games for the Lady
Rangers.
Sterling will return to action
Tuesday when they travel to
Dobie. ■
saved him.
Bates (21-12-2) had his best
success with several hard
it was a game. As long as we
give great effort we’re going
to gel. I’m not uncomfortable sapped whatever momentum
Bates was building, Holyfield
‘ pinne.d him again and began
pounding on Bates’ face and
body. There was so little resis-
tance that the referee stopped
the fight rather than let Bates
be saved by the bell again.
Leonard said. “On Tuesday
night, we got off the bus and
played like it was a scrim-
mage. Tonight, we played like rights to Holyfield’s side that
pushed him back in the second
round. After several clinches
Connally who led the Lady
Eagles with IT kills, and
Keely Rivera who had seven.
BH also took advantage of
several unforced errors by
REL.
easy,” Home said. “1 had to
say some things on the side-
line during the second game.
But we are still young.”
The Lady Texans closed
within 15-8 but that would be
as close as they got. Breazeale
scored a kill and a block to
make the score 24-9 and a two
handed touch by Rayburn
gave Sterling the 2-0 advan-
tage.
In-the third game Mason
took a seat on the bench as the
rest of the team got playing
time.
The spotlight fell on
Tadlock who went off with
seven kills in the third game
to lead Sterling to the 25-16
clincher. The game was closer
with the Lady Texans trailing
13-11 at one point. The game
stayed close at 19-16 before
six straight points by the Lady
Rangers sent the Lady Texans
home. Bell started the closing
run with a kill and added an
ace. Tadlock added two kills
one of which .was the match
clincher.
Tn the junior varsity game,
second then caught his insur-
ance-salesman foe in the cor-
ner to earn a technical knock-
out with 4 seconds left in the
round, capturing his first victo-
ry since June 2002.
The 43-year-old Holyfield
major serving game. We ended a career;wor$t skid of
victory over Hasim Rahman.
That doesn’t even include get-
ting KO’d last summer on the
reality television show
“Dancing With The Stars.”
A crowd of about 8,000
chanted “Ho-ly-field!” about
45 seconds in, then the four-
time heavyweight champion
really got them roaring over
the last 30 seconds of the first
round. He trapped Bates on the
far side of the ring, bouncing
him against the ropes with a
Holyfield
rolls in
comeback
DALLAS (AP) — Evander
Holyfield began his latest
comeback looking a lot more
like “The Real Deal” than he
has in years.
Holyfield rocked Jeremy
Bates into the ropes late in the
first round, withstood a few * ’
Crosby
The Lady Cougars
improved to 2-0 on the year in
a 25-1'6,25-13,25-15 win
over South Houston. Brittany ^ard body shots early in the
Hoag led Crosby with five * *
kills as Kristin Pannabecker
had four kills and Lindsey
Bates, Lacy Bates and Kortnie
Willis each had two.
“We played really well,”
CHS Stephanie Cone said. “It
had seven missed serves in the three straight losses since his
whole game and I think we
ended up with 13 aces.”
Crosby will take the court
today when they face
Splendora at 9:15 a.m. in the
Huffman tournament.
Leonard was a lot happier
with his team’s performance
than he was on Tuesday night
when they split their season-
opening matches at PNG.
“I was real happy with our
“Barbers Hill is a consistent effort, movement, everything,” flurry of punches. The bell
nr»Vinrr unrl rxaccinrr tAafh ” I cnirl “An Tnpcrfav ooxrorl
blocking and passing team,”
REL coach Alicia Salinas
said. “When you play a team
like that you’re going to have
to fight. It’s a learning point
when you play a team that’s
consistent. But our level of
play did go up as the match
went on."
Kevyn Jackson led REL
with 12 kills, while Lori Ward, night at 5:30 p.m. at Lee
had 27 assists, as the Lady College. Barbers Hill will
Ganders dropped to 1-1 on the return to action Tuesday at
season. Nederland at 6:30 p.m.
itures
Angleton
93/74
Galveston
91/82
Alvin ft.
93/78
Texas City
92/80
Crystal Beach
94/75
'Lake Jackson
.93/74
Shown is today's weather. Temperatu
are today's highs and tonight’s lows.
SUNDAY
Partly cloudy
! ■W7MM
,r,’i
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
"'JwuiObM
Why not have fun with it and
Good
Sep/4
97/75
I
Some sun
during the second round of the PGA Championship golf tourna-
ment.
96“
79“
Liberty
94/75
Partly sunny, humid;
a sfray p.m. t-storm
The soft, vulnerable course
yielded another record day —
61 players under par on
Garcia and Weir, two central
characters from Medinah in
Kingwood
96£5
. 6:50 a m.
7:56 p.m.
3:43 a.m.
6:22 p.m.
Last
Devers
94/77
ft.
24-hr.
change
40.06
40.29
40.02
Conroe
96/73
ft.
Anahuac
94/78
ft.
Kountze
95/75 <
Level
5.51
3.27
10.97
ft
High Island
94/74
the majors. The last time he
made the cut in a major was
PGA
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7A
An afternoon
thundershower
possible
at Oak Hill — as the seventh
alternate, no less. And if he
wasn’t at Medinah, he’d be
picking up the kids from
school, cooking out and tack-
ling a honey-do list.
“I’m 42 years old. I’ve been
doing this for 19 years,”
Andrade said. “It’s the PGA
AP Photo/Tony Deja
Tiger Woods flips his putter on the 13th after missing a birdie putt Friday.
Jr
me get in this position every
single major. We have a hell
of a leaderboard, and I’m
looking forward to continuing anything back.”
to have a great time.”
Herron has a little more at
stake — he is 17th in the
Ryder Cup standings and
needs at least a two-way tie
majors. This isn’t about grinds, —for seventh to have a chance
ing out pars; it’s more about ;
set the day before.
The cut was at even-par
the 20()3 PGA Championship 144, matching the lowest in
Solunar Table
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times lor
fish and game.
Major Minor Major Minor
Today 8:51a 2:37 a 9:18 p 3:04 p
9:38 a 3:26 a 10:04 p 3:51 p
10:24 a 4:12 a 10:49 p 4:36 p
11:08a 4:57a 11:31 p 5:20p
---- 6:02 p
Baytown
94/78
a.
Houston
ft. 97/76
ft.
Pasadena
94/78
....................... 5
........................ 9
.............. 9
............................5
8-10: Very High
114: Extreme
TODAY
A thunderstorm in
spots this afternoon | j
Lumberton ft.
94/75
Beaumont
94/75 q
.7. ‘'SA
ft
Winnie
94/77
Aldine
’97/76—
ft
relation to par at a PGA
Championship. It was even-
par 142 at Riviera in 1995.
Still, Medinah has enough
trees and water to punish mis-
takes, so no one was able to
run away from the pack.
“There’s a bunched leader-
board. You knew it was going
to be that way with soft
greens, and that’s basically
iirncit if’o fitrnorl zxi»f fry ka ”
Woods said. “You’ve got to go
out there ... and make some
birdies, and try not to give
AccuWeather90 5-Day Forecast for Bay town
TONIGHT
When his tee shot on the
18th clattered through the
trees and dropped in the
rough, he was fighting for par.
Then came his approach,
barely onto the green, and the
crowd roared as he matched
Woods with birdie.
“I’m fighting, man, I’m
fighting,” Mickelson said.
“I’ve just got to get it turned
around.”
Ogilvy looked the sharpest
of the three, especially with
four straight birdies. He stum-
bled in the middle of his
round but recovered with a
birdie on the toughest par 3 at
No. 13, and he was solid com-
ing in for a 68.
“I can promise you, no one
is scared that I’m on the
leaderboard,” he said.
Woods wouldn’t say that.
“There’s a reason why he’s
the U.S. Open champion,”
Woods said. “If there’s any
tournament in the world we
have to grind it out, plod your
way along, it’s the U.S. Open,
especially Winged Foot. Geoff
is an extremely talented play-
er, understands how to play
major championship golf, and
he’s getting the job done.”
For all of them, the work is
only starting.
finally arrived, just in time for
them to go their separate ways
on the weekend.
Woods got some outside
help on the opening hole
when his tee shot went left,
hopped hard over a bunker
and was headed down the
slope until a fan jumped up
and swatted it down. Woods
still had to pitch over the trees
and short of the green, saving
par with a wedge to 3 feet.
The British Open champion
didn’t know what happened
until after his round.
“1 knew I got a weird hop,”
he said. “Hey, 1 appreciate it.
It’s nice to have Shaq out
there knocking them back.”
Woods holed a 30-foot
birdie on the par-5 fifth, and
his other two birdies on the
par 5s were inside a foot.
Then came the 18th, where
his 20-footer barely caught the
left edge of the cup and
dropped.
Mickelson’s birdie was far
more exciting, as was just
about everything he did on
Rosenberg
•• 93/75
A
I
Some sun, a t-storm
possible in the p.m. j
—I ma
first alternate to win a major
since John Daly in the ’91
PGA Championship. “I’ve
worked as hard as anybody.”
Their task got a little bit
tougher in the final hour of a
dark, gloomy afternoon out-
■ side Chicago.
Woods, scrambling for pars
early before taking advantage
of the par 5s, finished off his
round of 68 with a 20-foot
birdie putt that left him one
shot behind, along with U.S.
Open champion Geoff Ogilvy
(68) and the resurgent Davis
Love III (69).
“It’s always interesting to
see where Tiger is,” Herron
said. “He wasn’t on the board
most of the day. He must have
do’ne something on the last
few holes.” .
Phil Mickelson was all oyer
Medinah but escaped the
rough on No. 18 with an
approach that barely cleared a
bunker and hopped onto the
green to 15 feet for a birdie
that gave him a 71 and put
him at 4-under 140.
“They’re not going to come
back, obviously,” Mickelson
said of the 17 players ahead of
r _ him. “I need to go out and
— shoot a low round. Six under
1:59 ajtn. par tomorrow would put me
right in it for Sunday.”
The scores look more like
the Bay Hill Invitational. But
that super-sized Wanamaker
Trophy sitting on a table by
the first tee is a reminder that ------------------- - — -
m far more is at stake this week. ■ Championship. Why not me?
Pressure comes from the
prize. It gets tougher looking enjoy it? It’s not like guys like what it’s turned out to be,’
at the number of players in
contention, including former
— major champions like Woods,
Ogilvy, Mickelson, Love,
— David Toms, Jose Maria
Olazabal and Mike Weir.
The course is usually a fac-
tor, too, but the dynamics are
far different from other
Qarcia finished one shot
behind Woods, while Weir
shared the 54-hole lead.
Those fireworks everyone
expected from the marquee
Friday, beating the mark of 60 group of major champions
Almanac_______
Houston through 4 p.m. yesterday
Temperature:
High........................................
Low............................I............
Preeipitation:
24 hours through 4 p.m. yest........0.00”
AccuWeather UV Index "
Today
10 a.m......
Noon ...........................
2 p.m.
4 p.m..........................
0-2: Low l
3-5: Moderate
6-7: High
The higher the UV index number, the greater the
need for eye and skin prpiecdon.
RealFeel Temperature®
The patented AccuWeather RealFeel Temperature is an
index of how the air really feels, taking into account all
weather faftors including temperature, humidity, wind,
precipitation and sunshine.
Today......■.............. 109°
Sunday.......’.....................................109°
Monday.......................... 106°
Tuesday........................ 104°
Wednesday ................. 106°
Sun and Moon
Sunrise tomorrow.................
Sunset tomorrow night ......
Moonrise tomorrow .............
Moonset tomorrow ...........
New First Full
®
Aug 23 zlug 31 Sep 7
Local Weather
Location
Liberty
Moss Bluff
JRomayor
Tides
Point Barrow, n-inity Bay
Today Sun. Mon.
High 10:51 a.m. 11:32 a.m. 12:03 p.m.
Low 12:15 a.m. 1:10 a.m.
Cleveland - X A
97/75
Air Quality
I°days Moderate
Forecast
Yesterday's A.Q.I. Reading
_
51-100 101-150
Moderate Unhealthy Unhealthy
sensitive
Source: Texas Comm, on Environmental Quality
AccuWeather.eom'
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed. 11:51 a 5:40 a
Trinity River
In feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday
Flood
stage
26
15
40
Toms shot 67 to lead a
group at 6-under 138 that
included Billy Mayfair, who
had surgery for testicular can-
cer only two weeks ago.
-__________________ -____- Another shot back was a
ing out pars; it’s more about at making the U.S. team. Still, crowd that included Sergio
making birdies and not mak- the rumpled one doesn’t get r.omia r»ntr,i
ing anything worse than pan-,, ruffled easily. When he holed
“If 1 slip up at all, I could his long birdie putt to join the the ’99 PGA Championship,
be in the middle of the pack four-way tie at the top, he ■ " ' "• • • •
come Sunday,” Donald said. treated it like a tap-in for par.
Andrade might be the most Tl'—a —Ul--------
relaxed of the bunch, since he
didn’t even expect to be here
and has never fared well in
I
f
■1
i
I
u
ion
lurries.
SIMM
loudy, sn-sn
snow, i-ice.
Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, f
t-thunderstorms, r-rain,
8A
SPORTS
THE BAYTOWN SUN
Saturday, August 19,2(K)(>
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a £ 3 g a a 8 S K) $ a El £ S' I
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Clements, Clifford E. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 269, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 19, 2006, newspaper, August 19, 2006; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1191844/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.