CITY SECTION GOLF: G.H. SWEEPS TEAM, INDIVIDUAL TITLES.Byline: Dave Shelburne Shelburne, town (1990 pop. 5,871) in Chittenden co., NW Vermont, 7 mi (11 km) S of Burlington on the banks of Lake Champlain. A popular resort, Shelburne is also a center for local lumber and dairy industries. Staff Writer Granada Hills junior Andrew Ok shot the best score of the City Section boys' golf championship for a second consecutive round Tuesday, helping the Highlanders to a sweep of the individual and team titles. Ok's late-charging teammates provided the anxiety relief for 38-year Highlanders coach Joe White, shaking off a slow start to rally and win the school's third section team title in four years and 10th overall. The efforts were enough for a 12-point winning margin for Granada Hills, which started Tuesday's final round leading the 12-team competition by eight strokes. But while Ok was starting and finishing fast again in a 1-under-par 70-73-143 performance that was seven strokes better than his closest competitor, the rest of the Granada Hills team struggled early. ``I figured when I got here this morning, we'd really have to fall apart to lose,'' said White, who then watched as his team - with the exception of Ok - headed in that direction on the front nine. By the time the Highlanders hit the back nine, they had fallen five strokes behind 14-time City champion Palisades Palisades, cliffs along the west bank of the Hudson River, NE N.J. and SE N.Y., extending from N of Jersey City, N.J., to the vicinity of Piermont, N.Y., with a general altitude of from 350 ft to 550 ft (107–168 m). . But Granada Hills surged down the stretch as seniors Scott Hoch Scott Mabon Hoch (born November 24, 1955) is an American golfer, who represented his country in the Ryder Cup in 1997 and 2002. Hoch was born in Raleigh, North Carolina. (80), Aaron Hoffer (80) and Liam Slattery (84) all rallied hard and freshman Robbie Weinstein contributed an 82. It was enough for a winning 793 total. Palisades wound up a card-off loser (jargon) loser - An unexpectedly bad situation, program, programmer, or person. Someone who habitually loses. (Even winners can lose occasionally). Someone who knows not and knows not that he knows not. to Venice after both tied for second place and the section's final berth in the June 3 CIF/SCGA Championship. Palisades, which advanced tournament runner-up Ben Seelig (77-73-150), Alex Podell (73-78-151) and Brandon Schlig (77-78-155) to CIF/SCGA as individuals, wound up in a tie when Austin Curtis was assessed a two- stroke penalty on the final hole for removing a leaf that had dropped onto his ball in a bunker bunk, bunker large storage bin. bunk forage forage, usually ensilage stored in a large storage bunk and made available to cattle or other livestock along a face of the storage. . ``He didn't know it was a rules violation and he admitted he did it,'' said White, who put the matter to a vote of the coaches. ``I think it was the most benign benign /be·nign/ (be-nin´) not malignant; not recurrent; favorable for recovery. be·nign adj. Of no danger to health, especially relating to a tumorous growth; not malignant. decision we could make.'' Westchester (815) finished fourth, followed by Monroe (830) and San Pedro (837) in a competition that also earned CIF/SCGA individual berths for area golfers Erik Tobak of Taft (77-75-152), Kevin Bognot of Monroe (77-75-152), Andrew Lepore of North Hollywood (74-78-152), Brandon Nunez of El Camino Real El Camino Real (Spanish for The Royal Road or The King's Highway) was the name of a series of pre-automobile highways linking the various New World colonies of Spain:
ECR European Congress of Radiology ECR Electron Cyclotron Resonance ECR El Camino Real (Kings Highway; California) ECR Electronic Cash Register ECR East Coast Radio (South Africa) (77-78-155). Dave Shelburne, (818) 713-3609 dave.shelburne(at)dailynews.com |
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