From bsauro@buda.org Tue Jul 9 03:47:51 2002 From: "Brian Sauro" To: "Matthew Brier" Cc: "Loring Holden" Subject: Monday 7/8: White 17, Forest 16 Date: Tue, 9 Jul 2002 03:46:45 -0400 Monday July 8 White 17, Forest 16 Forest was undefeated on the season, White was coming off a two-game win streak, and both teams were fired up for the game. White had Justin Lutes back, but was still missing Kit Wallach, Andre Beskrowni, Brian Nicholas, Bob Michael, Eric Weis to injuries, one of which was actually not, as far as I know, caused by Scott Wiant of Orange. I kid Scott, but really we love him... preferably from a safe distance. Forest has a very solid team overall; I can see why they hadn't lost before this game. They like to break the mark and look to do so early in the stall count. They seem to prefer a controlled game with passes underneath, working off the breaks, but have a couple throwers and several receivers who are capable of taking you deep. They also have smartly avoided the trap all too many teams fell into of loading up on Brians, Emilys, and especially Jeffs. Forest struck first and the teams traded points early but White got its offense in groove and took control. After another White D, a offensive miscue gave Forest the disc back and they capitalized, cutting the lead to 8-6. White converted on O to take half at 9-6. In the second half, however, Forest came storming back, running off four unanswered points. A straight up mark goaded an impatient White into forcing throws for a while but White got back on track, though Forest maintained a slim lead. As the White D clamped down on the underneath, Forest got some timely hucks from Dave Toohey and Chip Dietrich to Joe Tuazon and others. A late run put White back on top by two, and at 16-14, White got a D and had the disc to win. Forest was not ready to give up yet and showed why they had won six in a row including several close games. The last few points were very tense as both teams upped the D and forced turnovers. Forest tied the game at 16-16, cap at 17. Both team had chances but it was White that worked confidently up the field to Tim Gerheim who calmly looked off several covered receivers before throwing the game-winning forehand. This game was intensely competitive, but very spirited-- a great way to end the first half of the RIPUL season. Actually Purple's team cookout, which I crashed, was an even better way. Thanks Purple!-- more beer next time, please. --cape