1
VERMILLION — The Vermillion Tan- agers scored a pair of victories in a home wrestling triangular on Thurs- day. Vermillion beat Crofton-Bloomfield 67-6 and Wagner 54-21. In the win over Crofton-Bloomfield, Vermilion picked up ins from Jacob Husby (113), Noah Walker (138) and Regan Bye (160). Kyle Seibel (126) and Brett Bye (170) each won by technical fall. In the win over Wagner, Trey Hage (120), Andrew Pietrzak (126), Walker (138), Carter Kratz (145) and Regan Bye (160) won by pin. Wagner beat Crofton-Bloomfield in the other match. No other information was reported. Vermillion travels to Yankton for its invitational tournament on Saturday. Start time is set for 9 a.m. at the Sum- mit Center. VERMILLION 67, CROFTON-BLOOMFIELD 6: 106 — Riley Beach V by forfeit; 113 — Jacob Husby V pin. Christian Kleinschmit 0:51; 120 — Trey Hage V dec. Lucas Miller 7-5; 126 — Kyle Seibel V tech. fall Reece McFarland 4:00; 132 — Kobe Culver V by forfeit; 138 — Noah Walker V pin. Levi Honeywell 5:12; 145 — Carter Kratz V by forfeit; 152 — Josh Westhuase V by forfeit; 160 — Regan Bye V tech. fall Quinten Moles 2:00; 170 — Brett Bye V pin. Kaleb Johnson 1:19; 182 — Ethan Poppe CB by forfeit; 195 — Brandon Hertz V by forfeit; 220 — Noah Wester- gaard V by forfeit; 285 — Open VERMILLION 54, WAGNER 21: 106 — Riley Beach V pin. Preston Nedved 1:40; 113 — Jacob Husby V dec. Ben Soukup 2-0; 120 — Trey Hage V pin. Calvin McBride 3:19; 126 — Andrew Pietrzak V pin. Tony Bruguier 1:58; 132 — Kyle Seibel V dec. Sineway Marshall 7-5; 138 — Noah Walker V pin. Ethan Heth 3:53; 145 — Carter Kratz V pin. Logan Kafka 5:46; 152 — Josh Westhuase V by forfeit; 160 — Regan Bye V pin. Cole Soulek 1:01; 170 — Brett Bye V by forfeit; 182 — Andrew Soukup W by forfeit; 195 — Trevor Lensing W by forfeit; 220 — Jace Johnson W dec. Noah Westergaard 5-0; 285 — Truman Ashes W by for- feit Parkston 42, Gregory-Burke 28 PARKSTON — The Parkston Trojans used five pins to pull away from Gregory-Burke 42-28 in prep wrestling action on Thursday. Logan Mahoney (120), Dawson Semmler (138), Lucas Bietz (152), Miles Semmler (195) and Austin Bertram (220) all won by pin for Parkston. Atlas Willuweit (106) and Skye Soesbe (182) won by pin for Gregory-Burke. 106 — Atlas Willuweit GB pin. Tucker Murtha 2:55; 113 — Frank Even GB by forfeit; 120 — Logan Mahoney P pin. Caleb Stukel 0:55; 126 JAMES D. CIMBUREK/P&D Wagner's Trevor Lensing takes down Crofton-Bloomfield's Ethan Poppe during their 182-pound match in a wrestling triangular on Thursday in Vermillion. Wagner pinned Poppe to help the Red Raiders to the dual victory. Vermillion swept both teams to take the triangular. Friday, 2.6.15 ON THE WEB: www.yankton.net SPORTS DEPARTMENT: [email protected] PRESS DAKOTAN PAGE 6A sports This Home Game is Brought To You By: American Family Insurance First Dakota National Bank Follow Us & Watch Live at mmclancers.com T e American o h i s H o m e G a m e ame ome G his H T American A m e r i c a n First Da Fir F i r s t D a m m F T e t n Family I nce u i s B r o u g g h h t t T T o o o Y Y Y o o o Y u o B y : : y B u o Y Yo Y Y Yo Yo Yo Yo o o o T T To T T T To To To To m t t h h g g u u o o r rance e is B n Family Insurance n F a m i l y I n s u r a n c e ota National Bank t ota National Bank k o t a N a t i o n a l B a n k k k c ive a at t a Wa o ll o om ancers.c cl mm mm ch L s&W wU USD Softball Team Begins Season Today In Nashville P&D FILE PHOTO South Dakota pitcher Rachel Cue sends the ball home during a game in the 2014 season. Cue and the Coyotes open the 2015 sea- son today (Friday) in the Music City Classic at Nashville, Tenn. BY ALAN DALE Vermillion Plain Talk VERMILLION — To make the 2015 softball season the most successful one during the University of South Dakota’s time as an NCAA Division I program, the Coyotes will have to set that tone as road warriors. Beginning Friday in Nashville, Ten- nessee, the USD women will try to im- prove on back-to-back 29-win seasons this campaign when they take the field against Ball State today (Friday) at 1:30 p.m. in the first of four games at the Music City Classic. USD will follow that game up with contests Saturday against Georgetown and the hosts Belmont and wrap the weekend’s action Sunday at 11 a.m. vs. Kansas City. This weekend begins a two-month road odyssey as the USD women are scheduled to make trips to Florida twice Iowa, Kansas, and Texas before Summit League play begins. They still won’t play their first game at home until April 11 when they host a doubleheader against league foes Fort Wayne. Mix in some more trips to Ames and Omaha, along with an excursion to Grand Forks and the Coyotes will play all but 11 of their 55 scheduled games in the warm embrace of Vermillion. But according to eighth-year head coach Amy Klyse and the players this could be the year the Coyotes take that next big step toward prominence. Picked by league coaches this pre- season to finish third — beat North Dakota State and IUPUI — in the Sum- mit, a break here and there, a quickly adjusted new infield and a stable of solid arms in the bullpen could push them forward a bit more and maybe to the program’s first ever NCAA Division I National Tournament appearance. Where Are They At? Last season the Coyotes finished 29- 22 overall, 9-8 in Summit League action, while only going 4-5 on its paltry home schedule. They ultimately went 1-2 in the league tournament in Fargo, drop- ping two straight after an opening win against South Dakota State. USD was denied a 30th win when it saw the season end with an 11-8 loss to the host and eventual champion North Dakota State Bison. Now, the Coyotes expect more from themselves in year four as a Summit member after three years and a com- bined 33-27 record. “Through the eight years we have transitioned from Division II to Division I it’s really hard to label (where they are at),” Klyse said. “We have two different categories. As a program overall, as a staff we are great in working well to- gether and that filters down to the kids. I think we are at a place where we can compete for a conference championship and that’s a great place to be. “We have gotten to the point where on any given day we can beat any team we can play. If we are on our ‘A’ game we can beat any team we play that’s on our schedule.” The Coyotes are seeing that ideology bear fruit especially after a fall ball win over the Cornhuskers. “It’s not anymore that we think we can, we have gone out and actually have done it,” Klyse said. “Our thought process is that it’s expecting to happen all the time. We obviously have to show up and work hard every day. We believe when we wake up and go to play these Top 25 teams we can compete with them. Consistently beating those teams and winning our conference champi- onship would be great and is certainly something we can do.” Klyse knows that to take the next step the Coyotes will have to replace es- sentially their entire infield, but the newer players are showing their mettle. Daly is also happy with the play of the new infielders backing up the ladies SOFTBALL | PAGE 7A Coyotes Crush WIU 75-61 HARRISBURG — The Yank- ton Bucks stretched its current win streak to a season-best four games, beating Harrisburg 67-61 in Eastern South Dakota Conference action on Thurs- day. Brady Hale led Yankton with 20 points and eight re- bounds. Austin Johnson netted 17 points. Matt Fitzgerald had 11 points. Bradey Sorenson scored 10 points off the bench. Tanner Frick added five assists. For Harrisburg, Cody Eide led the way with 18 points. Yankton takes a 12-4 record, 11-2 in the ESD, into a rematch with Aberdeen Central on Feb. 14 in Aberdeen. The Golden Ea- gles handed Yankton its last setback, a 34-27 decision on Jan. 24. Harrisburg, 1-11 and 1-10, travels to Brookings tonight (Friday). Harrisburg downed Yankton 69-63 in the JV game. For Yank- ton, Syd Boots led YHS with 14 points. Jared Rafferty had 13 points. Keenan LaCroix and Jordan Payer had 12 points each for the Bucks. Yankton won the sopho- more game 46-41, led by 15 points from Payer. Trevor Raf- ferty added seven points in the win. Harrisburg took both fresh- men games. In the ‘A’ game, a 56-32 setback, Ben Jurrens had 16 points and Kellen Franzen had six points for Yankton. In the ‘B’ game, a 69-60 setback, Andy LaBarge scored 17 points, Brady Dangler had 11 point and Cole Brummer had 10 points for Yankton. Lewis & Clark Conf. Winnebago 83, Bloomfield 60 WINSIDE, Neb. Winnebago downed Bloomfield 83-60 in the quarter- finals of the Lewis & Clark Conference boys’ basketball Tournament on Thursday in Winside, Nebraska. No statistics were available for Win- nebago (17-1), which draws the winner between Hartington-Newcastle and Lau- rel-Concord-Coleridge in the semifinals on Saturday in Allen. JAMES D. CIMBUREK/P&D South Dakota's Brandon Bos takes Western Illinois' Remy Roberts-Burnett off the dribble during their Summit League men's basketball game on Thursday at the DakotaDome in Vermillion. BY JEREMY HOECK [email protected] VERMILLION — One of the many rallying cries for the University of South Dakota men’s basketball team this season? Some- thing head coach Craig Smith calls NBA: ‘Next best action.’ Five days after a 1-point home loss, the Coyotes bounced back in a big way Thursday night, cruising past Western Illinois 75-61 in Sum- mit League action at the DakotaDome. With a game looming at first-place North Dakota State, the Coyotes (11-13, 5-5) certainly didn’t want four straight losses on their backs. “It’s nice to have some momentum going into Satur- day’s game, that’ll be a tough game,” senior Brandon Bos said. Up one at halftime against the Leathernecks (8-13, 3-7), USD was considerably more aggressive in the second half. The hosts out-scored WIU 24- 10 in the paint after halftime. “We knew we had to come out with a lot of energy, but we knew they would come back with a run,” said junior Tre Burnette, who scored 19 points and grabbed seven re- bounds. The early stages of each half were dominated by the Coyotes. They started the first half 14-2 and then scored the first 14 points of the sec- ond half. Everyone in the Dakota- Dome knew what USD had to do: Avoid giving it up. Senior Tyler Larson even joked later that it’s well known USD has Tanagers Sweep Home Triangular WRESTLING | PAGE 7A COYOTES | PAGE 7A BOYS | PAGE 7A Bucks Down Harrisburg also Listen To The Coyotes Talk About Thurs- day’s Victory Over WIU. yankton.net

sports Friday, 2.6.15 PRESS D USD Softball Team …tearsheets.yankton.net/february15/020615/020615_YKPD_A6.pdfroad warriors. Beginning Friday in Nashville, Ten-nessee, the USD women

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Page 1: sports Friday, 2.6.15 PRESS D USD Softball Team …tearsheets.yankton.net/february15/020615/020615_YKPD_A6.pdfroad warriors. Beginning Friday in Nashville, Ten-nessee, the USD women

VERMILLION — The Vermillion Tan-agers scored a pair of victories in ahome wrestling triangular on Thurs-day.

Vermillion beat Crofton-Bloomfield67-6 and Wagner 54-21.

In the win over Crofton-Bloomfield,Vermilion picked up ins from JacobHusby (113), Noah Walker (138) andRegan Bye (160). Kyle Seibel (126) andBrett Bye (170) each won by technicalfall.

In the win over Wagner, Trey Hage(120), Andrew Pietrzak (126), Walker(138), Carter Kratz (145) and ReganBye (160) won by pin.

Wagner beat Crofton-Bloomfield inthe other match. No other informationwas reported.

Vermillion travels to Yankton for itsinvitational tournament on Saturday.Start time is set for 9 a.m. at the Sum-mit Center.

VERMILLION 67, CROFTON-BLOOMFIELD 6: 106 — Riley BeachV by forfeit; 113 — Jacob Husby V pin. Christian Kleinschmit 0:51; 120 —

Trey Hage V dec. Lucas Miller 7-5; 126 — Kyle Seibel V tech. fall ReeceMcFarland 4:00; 132 — Kobe Culver V by forfeit; 138 — Noah Walker Vpin. Levi Honeywell 5:12; 145 — Carter Kratz V by forfeit; 152 — JoshWesthuase V by forfeit; 160 — Regan Bye V tech. fall Quinten Moles2:00; 170 — Brett Bye V pin. Kaleb Johnson 1:19; 182 — Ethan PoppeCB by forfeit; 195 — Brandon Hertz V by forfeit; 220 — Noah Wester-gaard V by forfeit; 285 — Open

VERMILLION 54, WAGNER 21: 106 — Riley Beach V pin. PrestonNedved 1:40; 113 — Jacob Husby V dec. Ben Soukup 2-0; 120 — TreyHage V pin. Calvin McBride 3:19; 126 — Andrew Pietrzak V pin. TonyBruguier 1:58; 132 — Kyle Seibel V dec. Sineway Marshall 7-5; 138 —Noah Walker V pin. Ethan Heth 3:53; 145 — Carter Kratz V pin. LoganKafka 5:46; 152 — Josh Westhuase V by forfeit; 160 — Regan Bye Vpin. Cole Soulek 1:01; 170 — Brett Bye V by forfeit; 182 — AndrewSoukup W by forfeit; 195 — Trevor Lensing W by forfeit; 220 — JaceJohnson W dec. Noah Westergaard 5-0; 285 — Truman Ashes W by for-feit

Parkston 42, Gregory-Burke 28PARKSTON — The Parkston Trojans used five pins

to pull away from Gregory-Burke 42-28 in prepwrestling action on Thursday.

Logan Mahoney (120), Dawson Semmler (138),Lucas Bietz (152), Miles Semmler (195) and AustinBertram (220) all won by pin for Parkston. AtlasWilluweit (106) and Skye Soesbe (182) won by pin forGregory-Burke.

106 — Atlas Willuweit GB pin. Tucker Murtha 2:55; 113 — FrankEven GB by forfeit; 120 — Logan Mahoney P pin. Caleb Stukel 0:55; 126

JAMES D. CIMBUREK/P&DWagner's Trevor Lensing takes down Crofton-Bloomfield's Ethan Poppe during their 182-pound match in a wrestlingtriangular on Thursday in Vermillion. Wagner pinned Poppe to help the Red Raiders to the dual victory. Vermillionswept both teams to take the triangular.

Friday, 2.6.15ON THE WEB: www.yankton.net

SPORTS DEPARTMENT: [email protected] DAKOTANP A G E 6 A

sports

This Home Game is Brought To You By:American Fami ly InsuranceFirst Dakota Nat i ona l Bank

Follow Us & Watch Live atmmclancers.com

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USD Softball Team Begins Season Today In Nashville

P&D FILE PHOTOSouth Dakota pitcher Rachel Cue sends the ball home during agame in the 2014 season. Cue and the Coyotes open the 2015 sea-son today (Friday) in the Music City Classic at Nashville, Tenn.

BY ALAN DALEVermillion Plain Talk

VERMILLION — To make the 2015softball season the most successful oneduring the University of South Dakota’stime as an NCAA Division I program, theCoyotes will have to set that tone asroad warriors.

Beginning Friday in Nashville, Ten-nessee, the USD women will try to im-prove on back-to-back 29-win seasonsthis campaign when they take the fieldagainst Ball State today (Friday) at 1:30p.m. in the first of four games at theMusic City Classic.

USD will follow that game up withcontests Saturday against Georgetownand the hosts Belmont and wrap theweekend’s action Sunday at 11 a.m. vs.Kansas City.

This weekend begins a two-monthroad odyssey as the USD women arescheduled to make trips to Florida twiceIowa, Kansas, and Texas before SummitLeague play begins. They still won’t playtheir first game at home until April 11when they host a doubleheader againstleague foes Fort Wayne.

Mix in some more trips to Ames andOmaha, along with an excursion toGrand Forks and the Coyotes will playall but 11 of their 55 scheduled games inthe warm embrace of Vermillion.

But according to eighth-year headcoach Amy Klyse and the players thiscould be the year the Coyotes take thatnext big step toward prominence.

Picked by league coaches this pre-season to finish third — beat NorthDakota State and IUPUI — in the Sum-mit, a break here and there, a quicklyadjusted new infield and a stable ofsolid arms in the bullpen could pushthem forward a bit more and maybe tothe program’s first ever NCAA Division INational Tournament appearance.

Where Are They At?Last season the Coyotes finished 29-

22 overall, 9-8 in Summit League action,while only going 4-5 on its paltry homeschedule. They ultimately went 1-2 inthe league tournament in Fargo, drop-ping two straight after an opening winagainst South Dakota State.

USD was denied a 30th win when itsaw the season end with an 11-8 loss tothe host and eventual champion NorthDakota State Bison.

Now, the Coyotes expect more fromthemselves in year four as a Summitmember after three years and a com-bined 33-27 record.

“Through the eight years we havetransitioned from Division II to Division Iit’s really hard to label (where they areat),” Klyse said. “We have two different

categories. As a program overall, as astaff we are great in working well to-gether and that filters down to the kids.I think we are at a place where we cancompete for a conference championshipand that’s a great place to be.

“We have gotten to the point whereon any given day we can beat any teamwe can play. If we are on our ‘A’ game wecan beat any team we play that’s on ourschedule.”

The Coyotes are seeing that ideologybear fruit especially after a fall ball winover the Cornhuskers.

“It’s not anymore that we think wecan, we have gone out and actually havedone it,” Klyse said. “Our thoughtprocess is that it’s expecting to happenall the time. We obviously have to showup and work hard every day. We believewhen we wake up and go to play theseTop 25 teams we can compete withthem. Consistently beating those teamsand winning our conference champi-onship would be great and is certainlysomething we can do.”

Klyse knows that to take the nextstep the Coyotes will have to replace es-sentially their entire infield, but thenewer players are showing their mettle.

Daly is also happy with the play ofthe new infielders backing up the ladies

SOFTBALL | PAGE 7A

Coyotes Crush WIU 75-61HARRISBURG — The Yank-

ton Bucks stretched its currentwin streak to a season-bestfour games, beating Harrisburg67-61 in Eastern South DakotaConference action on Thurs-day.

Brady Hale led Yanktonwith 20 points and eight re-bounds. Austin Johnson netted17 points. Matt Fitzgerald had11 points. Bradey Sorensonscored 10 points off the bench.Tanner Frick added five assists.

For Harrisburg, Cody Eideled the way with 18 points.

Yankton takes a 12-4 record,11-2 in the ESD, into a rematchwith Aberdeen Central on Feb.14 in Aberdeen. The Golden Ea-gles handed Yankton its lastsetback, a 34-27 decision onJan. 24.

Harrisburg, 1-11 and 1-10,travels to Brookings tonight(Friday).

Harrisburg downed Yankton69-63 in the JV game. For Yank-ton, Syd Boots led YHS with 14points. Jared Rafferty had 13points. Keenan LaCroix andJordan Payer had 12 pointseach for the Bucks.

Yankton won the sopho-more game 46-41, led by 15points from Payer. Trevor Raf-ferty added seven points in thewin.

Harrisburg took both fresh-men games. In the ‘A’ game, a56-32 setback, Ben Jurrens had16 points and Kellen Franzenhad six points for Yankton. Inthe ‘B’ game, a 69-60 setback,Andy LaBarge scored 17points, Brady Dangler had 11point and Cole Brummer had10 points for Yankton.

Lewis & Clark Conf.Winnebago 83, Bloomfield 60

WINSIDE, Neb. — Winnebagodowned Bloomfield 83-60 in the quarter-finals of the Lewis & Clark Conferenceboys’ basketball Tournament on Thursdayin Winside, Nebraska.

No statistics were available for Win-nebago (17-1), which draws the winnerbetween Hartington-Newcastle and Lau-rel-Concord-Coleridge in the semifinalson Saturday in Allen.

JAMES D. CIMBUREK/P&DSouth Dakota's Brandon Bos takes Western Illinois' Remy Roberts-Burnett off the dribble during their Summit League men's basketballgame on Thursday at the DakotaDome in Vermillion.

BY JEREMY [email protected]

VERMILLION — One of themany rallying cries for theUniversity of South Dakotamen’s basketball team thisseason?

Some-thing headcoach CraigSmith callsNBA: ‘Nextbest action.’

Fivedays after a1-pointhome loss,the Coyotesbounced back in a big wayThursday night, cruising pastWestern Illinois 75-61 in Sum-mit League action at theDakotaDome.

With a game looming atfirst-place North DakotaState, the Coyotes (11-13, 5-5)certainly didn’t want fourstraight losses on theirbacks.

“It’s nice to have somemomentum going into Satur-day’s game, that’ll be a toughgame,” senior Brandon Bossaid.

Up one at halftime againstthe Leathernecks (8-13, 3-7),USD was considerably moreaggressive in the second half.The hosts out-scored WIU 24-10 in the paint after halftime.

“We knew we had to comeout with a lot of energy, butwe knew they would comeback with a run,” said juniorTre Burnette, who scored 19points and grabbed seven re-bounds.

The early stages of eachhalf were dominated by theCoyotes. They started thefirst half 14-2 and then scoredthe first 14 points of the sec-ond half.

Everyone in the Dakota-Dome knew what USD had todo: Avoid giving it up. SeniorTyler Larson even joked laterthat it’s well known USD has

Tanagers Sweep Home Triangular

WRESTLING | PAGE 7A

COYOTES | PAGE 7A BOYS | PAGE 7A

Bucks DownHarrisburg

also■ Listen To TheCoyotes TalkAbout Thurs-day’s VictoryOver WIU.yankton.net