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sat, APRIL 12 @ 7:30PM VOLUME 10 ISSUE 14 | APRIL 11-17, 2014 | YOUR SOURCE FOR SPORTS IN GEORGIA Time to look great! BLAZING BRAVES Braves get off to fast start to begin 2014 season | Pg. 5 Back In The Saddle | Pg. 8 Reclassification Rundown | Pg. 4 Six-time state champion Boyd to coach East Jackson hoops High schools prepare for 2014-2015 shift
Transcript
Page 1: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

sat, APRIL 12 @ 7:30PM

VOLUME 10 ISSUE 14 | APRIL 11-17, 2014 | YOUR SOURCE FOR SPORTS IN GEORGIA

Time to look great!

BLAZING BRAVESBraves get off to fast start to begin 2014 season | Pg. 5

Back In The Saddle | Pg. 8

Reclassification Rundown | Pg. 4

Six-time state champion Boyd to coach East Jackson hoops

High schools prepare for 2014-2015 shift

Page 2: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

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Page 3: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

3Vol. 10 Iss. 14 | April 11-17, 2014

PUBLISHER/EDITOR I.J. Rosenberg GENERAL MANAGER Melanie Snare ART/CREATIVE DIRECTOR DJ Galbiati Blalock SENIOR MANAGING EDITOR Stephen Black BUSINESS MANAGER Marvin Botnick ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Marcus Nabors BEAT WRITERS Ricky Dimon (Braves) Joe Deighton (Gladiators) Robert Tinter (Hawks) Brian Jones (KSU) Joe Deighton (UGA) Craig Sager II (Falcons) Stephen Black (Tech) Jay Underwood (GSU) STAFF WRITERS Paige Morton Alex Ewalt Paris Freeman Robert Tinter Jalisa Smith

TO ADVERTISE IN SCORE ATLANTA:404.256.1572

Copyright 2014 Score Atlanta Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved. Score Atlanta is published in print every other week on Fridays and a digital ver-sion is posted to ScoreAtl.com in-between print issues. Views expressed in Score Atlanta are not necessarily the opinion of Score Atlanta, its staff or advertisers. Score Atlanta does not knowingly accept false or mislead-ing editorial content or advertising nor is Score Atlanta responsible for the content or claims of any advertising or editorial in this publication. No content (articles, photographs, graphics) in Score Atlanta may be used for reproduction without written permission from the publisher.

Score Atlanta is looking for interns. Please visit www.scoreatl.com/internships for more information on our program.

Send your spring sports scores to us! We will put them in the AJC print edition and on AJC.com as well as our own scoreboard. While our deadline for the newspaper varies by night, we can promise that all reported scores will make it online.

Send baseball, soccer and lacrosse scores to [email protected], call 404-256-1572, tweet @scoreatlanta or text to 404-246-7819.

STARTING LINEUP 04 COLUMNISTS 05 08ON THE COVER INSIDE THE PREPS

ON THE INSIDE AT SCORE STAY CONNECTED!

/SCOREATLANTASPORTS

@SCOREATLANTA

WWW.SCOREATL.COMWWW.GAPREPNEWS.COM

SCORE LIST | NUMBERS

GEORGIA STATE | KENNESAW STATE GEORGIA | GEORGIA TECH

BRAVES | FALCONS HAWKS | GLADIATORS

COVER PHOTOS COURTESY OF POUYA DIANAT/AT-LANTA BRAVES, TY FREEMAN AND ROB SAYE.

061213

Page 4: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

4 SCORE ATLANTA | www.ScoreAtl.com

Prior to the 2012-13 school year, the GHSA expanded to a sixth classification for the first

time in its history while also splitting Class A into separate private and public postseasons. This growth introduced a new era within the Georgia high school football landscape. In the first two years under the newly-formed system we saw seven of 14 football state champions win titles for the first time in their school’s history. The GHSA had crowned 294 football state champions in its 64 seasons before the 2012 reclassification and yet half of the cham-pions in the last two seasons had never won the state crown before (Norcross, Gainesville, Jefferson, ELCA, Aquinas, Creekside, Marion County). Changes create fresh starts for programs and the massive restructuring in 2012 provided every team in the state with a formula to use as motivation entering the new season. An in-

dividual team may be driven by a heartbreak-ing loss that ended the previous season but. reclassification has the power to motivate on a state-wide scale. Throughout winter workouts and on into the dog days of summer, every team in the state is impacted in some way.

COMBINING POWERS … Before 2012, Camden County was unchal-lenged in its region play. The Wildcats owned a streak of 94 consecutive region wins enter-ing the newly formed Region 1-AAAAAA. In the final region game, Colquitt County topped Camden 13-12 and served the Wildcats their first region loss since the 1999 season. Unlike Camden County before 2012, Tucker is a school accustomed to playing in a highly-competitive region. The Tigers were reclassified up to Class AAAAAA for 2014-16 and will ignite a rivalry with Lovejoy. Tucker

opens the season in the 2014 Corky Kell Clas-sic against defending Class AAAAAA state champion Norcross before hosting Florida’s 2013 Class AAAA state champion Booker T. Washington the following Saturday (August 30). The biggest test of the season might come later when new region opponent Lovejoy hosts the Tigers on Halloween. Tucker beat Lovejoy 22-7 in the 2011 Class AAAAA state champi-onship game when Class AAAAA was still the highest classification. Lovejoy moved up while Tucker stayed the same and both schools lost in the state championship since 2012.

NOTEWORTHY MOVES … There are plenty of storylines to watch for with the 2014-16 changes. Region 1-AAAAAA lost Coffee and Brunswick to Class AAAAA and will add Lee County. Camden County will remain in Region 1 for football only. Region 3 saw movement as Tri-Cities dropped a clas-sification and Campbell, Pebblebrook and Westlake moved in from their current place in Region 4. Region 4 traded those three teams for North Paulding and Region 5 added Pope while Region 6 added Habersham Central and Northview. In Class AAAAA, Region 1 got a make-over with LaGrange, Carver-Columbus and Shaw. Bainbridge and Thomas County Cen-tral will compete in Region 1 for football only. Current AAAAAA Coffee and Brunswick are now classed into Region 3 in a sub-region with Camden County, Glynn Academy and Ware

County. Region 7 is no longer a divided region and Cambridge, Creekview, Forsyth Central, Kell, North Atlanta, North Springs, Riverwood, River Ridge, Sequoyah and Sprayberry consist of the new 10-team region. Region 6 will divide a total of 17 teams into sub-regions with M.L. King, Miller Grove, Stephenson and Southwest DeKalb all housed in subregion A. Region 5-AAAA welcomes Woodward Academy, which is moving up from Class AAA. Carrollton, Fayette County, Grady, Pike County, Sandy Creek, Troup, Whitewater and Woodward Academy comprise a solid Region 5. St. Pius X has a new Class AAAA home and will be in Region 6 with long-time rival Marist and the pair are joined by Arabia Mountain, Chamblee, Columbia, Cross Keys, Lithonia, Re-dan and Stone Mountain. Region 7 welcomes newcomer (from Class AAA) Cartersville in a field with Gilmer, Heritage-Catoosa, Lafay-ette, Northwest Whitfield, Pickens, Ridgeland and Southeast Whitfield. Buford will be in a 10-team Region 8 with Chestatee, Johnson-Gainesville, Madison County, Monroe Area, North Hall, North Oconee, Stephens County, Walnut Grove and White County. Calhoun and Jefferson and Westminster are notable schools moving up to Class AAA in 2014. Reclassifica-tion will impact every sport but football will give the first-hand look this fall. Photo courtesy of Rob Saye.

Soccer in the United States has never been and probably never will be as popular as the

three other major sports. However, the popu-larity of the sport has grown. Major League Soccer (MLS), the United States’ top-tier pro-fessional league, now has 19 teams. According to a 2013 Forbes article by Alex Morrell, aver-age attendance has surged to 18,600, which is a 35 percent increase from 2000. There has never been a better time to own an MLS team. The MLS is looking to grow, and in addition to adding a team in Orlando, the MLS is consider-ing bringing a team to Atlanta. The city of Atlanta is growing and its demographics will continue to change over the next 10 years. Atlanta is home to people and cultures from all over the world. Particu-

larly intriguing to the MLS is the large Hispanic population of Atlanta. Soccer is by far the most popular sport among people of Hispanic heri-tage. According the research by Pew Research, Atlanta has the 19th-largest Hispanic popula-tion in the United States, with around 530,000 Hispanics or close to 11 percent of Atlanta’s to-tal population. Seven of the cities with a higher Hispanic population already have an MLS team. The more attractive number that the MLS should look at is that about 54 percent of those 530,000 Hispanics are foreign born. The city of Atlanta has already decided to build a new baseball stadium and football stadium. The baseball stadium is planned to be moved, meaning Turner Field will be empty. A new soccer team could inhabit Turner Field

when the Braves leave. Renovations will need to be made, but it is a much cheaper option for the city and MLS. After losing the Atlanta Thrashers, the city of Atlanta yearns for another professional sports team to root for. The combination of the large Hispanic population and the projected growth of the population over the next 10 years make Atlanta a viable and enticing city to place a soccer team.

HAWKS FUTURES … The Hawks are headed for their seventh straight playoff appearance. That being said, nobody should mistake this Hawks team as a championship contender. With a first-round exit likely, it is time to look to the future. The Hawks will have a mid-to-late first-round pick in next year’s draft. The 2014 draft has been widely acclaimed for its depth. The Hawks will have an opportunity to select a player that can contribute right away. The Hawks have not had a true NBA starting center since Dikembe Mutombo was wagging his finger at defend-ers. Drafting a center will allow Al Horford to move to his more natural power forward po-sition. This move would keep Al fresher and could help him avoid the injury bug that has hit him over his Hawks career. After the pre-draft camps and scouting combine, a clear picture of

potential prospects will appear. The next step in becoming a champion-ship contender is through free agency. The Hawks have 14 players on their roster; nine of those players are signed into next season, leav-ing six spots open. One of those spots will more than likely be filled by whoever is chosen in the first round of the draft. The other five spots can be filled by anyone the Hawks can afford. The Hawks will have $49 million in contracts next year, leaving around $11 million to spend this summer without having to pay luxury tax. The Hawks can go over the salary cap and pay a luxury tax if necessary. The 2014 free-agent class is not as star filled as some in the past, but that is okay as the Hawks have a solid nucleus of Al Horford and Jeff Teague in the mix for years to come. Assuming the Hawks go big in the draft, targeting a wing player would help the Hawks reach another level. Luol Deng of the Cavaliers and Lance Stephenson would be expensive options. Cheaper options would be Atlanta native Jodie Meeks, or Trevor Ari-za. It is most likely the Hawks will sign a few cheaper players. Danny Ferry helped San Anto-nio build a championship using solid role play-ers surrounding two stars. Photo courtesy of the Atlanta Falcons.

SAGER SAYS

MLS TO ATL

BY CRAIG SAGER II | [email protected]

BY ROBERT TINTER | [email protected]

HOW RECLASSIFICATION ENERGIZES COMPETITION

BLANK ON THE BRINK OF BRINGING MLS TEAM TO ATLANTA

Page 5: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

5Vol. 10 Iss. 14 | April 11-17, 2014

A 4-3 record seven games into the 2014 campaign may suggest that the Braves

have been an average ballclub in most depart-ments. The opposite, of course, is true. It has been a tale of two intra-squad teams mak-ing up the roster. There are the pitchers; then there are the hitters. One group is wildly out-performing expectations; the other is not even scratching the surface of what was—and still is?—thought to be great potential. BACK-TO-BACK ACES … Atlanta headed into the regular season with a makeshift starting rotation due to both departures and injuries. Tim Hudson signed as a free agent with San Francisco, Freddy Garcia was released and both Kris Medlen and Bran-don Beachy were both lost to Tommy John sur-gery. Just 23-years old, Julio Teheran is already a last of the Mohicans of sorts in terms of the

a single RBI. B.J. is hitting .138 and Justin has a .231 average. Evan Gattis and Jason Heyward, who slumped the second half of last season for various reasons, are still struggling. Gattis is batting .188 with one home run and one RBI. Heyward is 3-for-28 (.107), leaving him last among the team’s starters in average. Freddie Freeman, Chris Johnson and Andrelton Sim-mons are continuing to perform, but a lack of teammates on base means that each one has just two RBIs. “Just like the first week of spring training, some guys get off to a great start and some guys get off to a slow start,” Heyward told the team’s website on Tuesday. “There’s a little different bit of timing and adrenaline when you’re coming into a season. I feel we’re all showing signs of settling in and just going out there and playing.”

ON THE HORIZON … Now would be a good time to start, as rival Washington is in town for a three-game series Friday through Sunday. The Braves are in the midst of a streak of 19 consecutive con-tests against NL East competition. Twenty-two of their first 28 games this season come against such rivals. It’s early, but parity is the name of the game up and down the MLB standings right now. The National League East is no exception. Separated by two games from top to bottom, it is one of four divisions in which the last place team is within 2.5 games of first. Washington (5-2) leads the way, just ahead of Miami (5-3), with New York and Philadelphia (both 3-4) one game back of Atlanta. While the Nation-als and Braves are considerable favorites over the other three, all five teams appear to be—at worst—decent. It will be difficult to pull away, but it will not take much to fall behind. As the saying goes at the Masters—which is currently underway in Augusta—you cannot win a title right at the start, but you can lose it. Did you hear that, Braves’ batters? Wake up! Photos courtesy of Pouya Dianat/Atlanta Braves.

Braves’ staff of yesteryear. The right-hander has lived up to his early-season billing as the rotation’s ace, with two stellar performances. He gave up only two runs in six innings in a 2-0 loss at Milwaukee on Opening Day before allowing a mere three hits and two runs in seven innings in a 6-2 win at Washington last Saturday. If Teheran has set the tone, his supporting cast is following along nicely. Aaron Harang, whom the Braves signed at the end of spring training on the same day they let go of Garcia, has also turned in two outstanding starts. The 35-year-old journey-man, playing for his fifth team since the start of the 2011 season, befuddled the Brewers last Wednesday through 6.2 innings while surren-dering no runs on just two hits in a 1-0 win. Ha-rang took the loss in Atlanta’s home opener on Tuesday night, but he had nine strikeouts in six innings and gave up only two hits and one run.

Alex Wood and David Hale have also im-pressed. Wood is 1-1 with a 1.93 ERA in 14 in-nings. The 23-year-old southpaw went seven innings against both New York and Washing-ton, allowing one run in a win over the Mets and two runs in a loss to the Nationals. Hale blanked Washington in five innings of work during a 2-1 Braves’ victory last Friday. “We had some young guys come up and step up and pitch real well,” catcher Gerald Laird told the Atlanta Journal Constitution fol-lowing Atlanta’s 4-2 season-opening road trip. “We have some guys in the bullpen pitching well, we have our starters. We knew what we were going to get from Julio and from what I’ve seen we’ve got guys that are going out there and competing, throwing strikes and they don’t look scared. They look like they’re in control.”

PANIC TIME? … Opposing pitchers have been in similar control against a stagnant Atlanta offense. As of the completion of Tuesday night’s games, the Braves are dead last in Major League Base-ball with 15 runs scored. By comparison, in one game by himself Milwaukee’s Ryan Braun drove in almost half as many runs (seven) as Atlanta’s entire season output. Only one other team, San Diego, has crossed the plate fewer than 20 times. In three losses, the Braves have scored a grand total of one run. Eleven of their runs have come in two games, a 5-2 win at Milwaukee last Tuesday and the 6-2 road victory over Washington. For those counting, that means a combined three runs have been scored by manager Fredi Gonzalez’s club in the other five games. “The offense will pick it up, I’m sure, down the road,” Gonzalez told the AJC. “There’ll be a stretch where our pitching staff is going to need the offense to pick them up.” That is not how it has worked so far, to put it mildly. The pitchers are getting almost no help of any kind and the primary culprits are familiar faces. After a combined 55 at-bats, the Upton brothers—B.J. and Justin—do not have

BRAVES BASEBALL

BY RICKY DIMON | [email protected]

BRAVES OVER .500 DESPITE EARLY-SEASON POWER OUTAGE

ON THE COVER

Page 6: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

6 SCORE ATLANTA | www.ScoreAtl.com

OUR TWO CENTSOur email newsletter is something we take a lot of pride in at Score. If you aren’t familiar with it, it is a high school sports-heavy publication that we produce each day to fill in our readers on the latest happenings in Georgia prep sports. We send it out Monday through Friday throughout the year and Monday through Saturday during the fall.

Not only do we cover popular sports like football, basketball and baseball, we also cover every other varsity sport the GHSA fields. If you like Georgia high school sports at all, sign up for our email newsletter by visiting www.tinyurl.com/scorenewsletter and enter your email address(es) that you’d like added to the distribution list.

WH

O’S

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NOT

Braves’ Pitching Braves’ HittingMatt Kuchar Masters FavoritePaul Millsap Soccer History

Atlanta’s starting rotation is keeping the team competi-tive through seven games of the season. Julio Teheran (2.77 ERA), Alex Wood (1.93) and Aaron Harang (0.71) have each made three impressive starts. As a whole, the Braves have a 1.92 ERA—second in the majors behind only Milwaukee (no other team is better than 2.25).

Atlanta’s pitching staff has been good enough for the team to be 7-0 through seven games, but its record stands at 4-3. The Braves are last in the majors in runs scored with 15. No player has more than three RBIs and three starters are hitting below the .200 line. Jason Heyward has a .107 average and B.J. Upton has fanned 13 times.

The former Georgia Tech star should have won last week’s golf tournament in Houston, but he still heads into this week’s Masters in outstand-ing form. Kuchar, who has two straight top-eight finish-es at Augusta National, has seven top-10 performances in his last nine events, in-cluding two consecutive top-four showings.

For the first time since 1994, the Masters is taking place without Tiger Woods, who underwent back surgery last month. Phil Mickelson is still playing despite an oblique in-jury, but for the first time in his career, he arrives at Augusta National with no top-10 fin-ishes in the first three months of the season.

The Hawks are clinging to the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference, in part thanks to Millsap. He has five straight double-doubles as of Wednesday afternoon, his longest such streak of the season. The power forward went for 24 points and 17 re-bounds on March 31 and he scored 24 points on Tuesday.

The history of professional soc-cer in Atlanta is not extensive, nor is it impressive. Either the leagues have struggled or the teams have performed poorly, or all of the above. But could this be different? Arthur Blank and Major League Soccer are close to announcing Atlanta as the league’s 22nd franchise.

SCORE LISTBy Brian Jones

Times the Braves were shut out at home last season10The first year the Masters awarded a green jacket to the champion

1949The Masters Tournament scoring record set by Tiger Woods in 1997-18

The Braves batting average through the first seven games.220Braves’ opponents batting averages through the first seven games.198The last time the Hawks had fewer than 40 wins prior to this year2008The last time Marist and St. Pius X played a football game. The rivals will share a region next season

2009Schools new East Jackson hoops coach David Boyd has coached to state championships

4

NUMBERSBy Craig Sager II

NEW TEAMIt looks like the MLS will have a new team soon and it will be based in Atlanta. The team would be the 22nd franchise and would start playing its games when the new Falcons stadium opens in 2017. I don’t watch a lot of MLS, but I will be all about this team when it starts playing.

After losing to Nebraska in the Gator Bowl a few months ago, the Bulldogs will hit the field for their annual spring game Saturday. This is an opportunity for fans to get a glimpse of what the 2014 team will look like. I’ll be there and I want to see what the defense looks like under new coordinator Jeremy Pruitt.

G-DAY

TEE TIMEThe golf world will head to Augusta this weekend for the Masters. It will be a different feel from the previous Masters tournaments because Tiger Woods will not be there due to a back injury. That’s unfortunate, but guys like Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Phil Mickelson and Rory McIlroy will be there, so there’s no lack of star power.

DREAM MATCHUPGeorgia State football has been taking its show on the road as the Panthers held spring practice at McEachern last Saturday. They will have another practice off-site at Lanier this Saturday. I think this is a good idea because it gives fans who don’t live close to the city an opportunity to see the Panthers up close and personal.

HONORING HANKThe Braves opened their home schedule on Tuesday, but it also marked the 40th anniversary of Hank Aaron breaking Babe Ruth’s home run record. There was a special ceremony an hour before the game and Aaron received personalized jerseys from the Braves, Hawks and Falcons. Despite Atlanta’s loss, it was a memorable night.

? “

ANSWER ON PAGE 14

Georgia athletics director Greg McGarity on the possibility of the Bulldogs

facing Notre Dame in football.

TRIVIA QUESTION

SANITY AT LAST

WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME THE BRAVES WERE SHUT OUT IN THEIR HOME

OPENER?

“We talk with a lot of institutions about

future scheduling and Notre Dame is

one of them.”

By

Ric

ky

Dim

on

Page 7: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14
Page 8: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

State high school hoops fans will see a famil-iar face in gyms next season. David Boyd,

who has won six boys state basketball titles at four different schools, will lead East Jackson in 2014-15. The school officially announced the hire Thursday. Boyd was at Excel Christian last year, but resigned during the season and now lives full time on St. Simons Island with his wife. Boyd was not sure if or when he would get back into coaching until former Milton athlet-ics director and current East Jackson principal Jamie Dixon contacted him. “I began to realize East Jackson was close to Athens (UGA) where my daughter Christina is a junior and my wife graduated from,” Boyd said. “One of my former players, Charles Mann, is doing really well there and I have a great rela-tionship with (Georgia assistant coach) Jonas

Hayes and I have a real good relationship with Coach Fox.” Dixon and Boyd worked together at Mil-ton where Dixon was the athletics director while Boyd coached the boys hoops team. It was there the pair established a relationship of mutual respect. “David brings an ability to coach basketball unlike I have seen anywhere in my career,” said Dixon. “His ability to make kids better is phe-nomenal. It is second-to-none in my opinion.”

ROOM TO GROW … While East Jackson is a relatively new school with little success on the hardwood, Boyd sees potential in the Athens-area program. “The community seems very hungry for a winner,” Boyd explained. “The gym is very nice

especially for a AAA school. The weight room is just incredible, it looks like a college weight room. It looked like a situation where you could come in there and build a program and the community would really appreciate that. I went to one of their games at the end of the year and was very impressed with the enthusi-asm of their student body and the potential of their players.” Boyd began his head coaching career at his high school alma mater, Campbell, in 1980 and was there until 1993. He then took the job at Tucker, where he won another state cham-pionship in 1996. Boyd then moved to Gwin-nett County’s Berkmar and won back-to-back state championships there in 2000-2001. Af-ter a four-year stint at Riverdale, Boyd landed at Milton in 2008, where he won state gold in 2010 and 2012. At the north Fulton school, however, Boyd was forced out in 2012 due to what was termed “undue influence.” “A lot of families wanted to be a part of what we were doing,” said Boyd of his career at Milton. “It is an excellent school, great bas-ketball program, guys getting scholarships, be-ing held accountable in the classroom, and so it was a situation where people wanted to be. And I feel like the only thing I did wrong there was care a little bit too much about making

sure that families were making the right deci-sion for their sons.”

PROGRAM BUILDER … Boyd sat out the 2012-2013 season, then was hired to coach at Excel Christian in Cart-ersville. He resigned midseason before moving to St. Simons. After a few months of rest, the Georgia State graduate is back on the hard-wood. Highly experienced in rebuilding pro-grams, this will be Boyd’s seventh head coach-ing job. Making a first impression is important when trying to turn around a program, accord-ing to Boyd. “I want to make sure we get off to a great start and talk about setting goals as a team and as individuals,” he explained. “And we’ll talk about work ethic, effort and those kinds of things that you can control and just really get everybody excited going to work and I’m going to send out a grade sheet to teachers to let them know that’s going to be an important part now.” East Jackson has not had a winning sea-son since 2008-2009 when the Eagles went 15-14. The hire is pending school board approval, which will meet on April 14. Photos courtesy of Ty Freeman.

DAVID BOYD HIRED

BY STEPHEN BLACK | [email protected]

SIX-TIME STATE CHAMP TO COACH EAST JACKSON NEXT SEASON

Class AAAAAAClass AAAAA-A Class AAAAA-A1.............................. Milton2.......................... Harrison3................North Gwinnett4............................. Walton5...........................Lambert

6....................... Centennial7............. Peachtree Ridge8............................Roswell9..........................Hillgrove10................. John’s Creek

6................ Blessed Trinity7................................ Pope8.........................St. Pius X9............................Decatur10.................... Cambridge

Score Atlanta/AJC Lacrosse Rankings

Class AAAAAA1.............................. Milton2........................... Lassiter3............................. Walton4................ Chattahoochee5........................Mill Creek

6.............................Etowah7....................... Centennial8................... West Forsyth9................... John’s Creek10.........................Lambert

1........................Northview2....................Westminster3...............................Lovett4..................................GAC5................Whitefield Aca.

1.................................. Kell2....................Westminster3........................Northview4................................ Pope5...................... Cambridge

6.........................St. Pius X7................ Blessed Trinity8......................... McIntosh9.......................Starr’s Mill10............................ Marist

BOYS GIRLS

Page 9: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

9Vol. 10 Iss. 14 | April 11-17, 2014

1..................... Brookwood2.......................... Lambert3.............................Walton4....................... Mill Creek5........................ Campbell6...........................Lassiter7.............. Douglas County8................... Johns Creek9.............Central Gwinnett10........................... Duluth

1..........................Harrison2.......................... Grayson3.........................Parkview4.............Peachtree Ridge5..................... Brookwood6...........................Lassiter7.............................Walton8................. South Forsyth9..............................Milton10........................... Duluth

1........................ St. Pius X2.............. Woodward Aca.3............... Oconee County4.................. North Murray5.....................Cartersville6...............Dawson County7........................North Hall8.........................West Hall9................Blessed Trinity10...........................Buford

1........................ St. Pius X2................Blessed Trinity3.............................Buford4...............Dawson County5...... Woodward Academy6.................... Pike County7............... Oconee County8.....................Cartersville9..................North Oconee10.........................Decatur

1.........................McIntosh2................................Pope3......................Gainesville4........... Lakeside-DeKalb5.............. Glynn Academy6......................Greenbrier7................ Clarke Central8.................Lithia Springs9...............................Rome10...................... Clarkston

1.........................McIntosh2........................Northgate3...................... Starr’s Mill4................................Pope5.......... Heritage-Conyers6.......................Loganville7....................... Northview8.........................Allatoona9......................Gainesville10............. North Paulding

1................................. GAC2...........................Calhoun3................... Westminster4................Murray County5........................ Wesleyan6... Chattahoochee County7...........................Bremen8.................... Benedictine9............... Toombs County10..........Westside-Macon

1................................. GAC2................... Westminster3..............................Lovett4...........................Calhoun5.......................Armuchee6........................ Jefferson7.............................Vidalia8....................St. Vincent’s9........................ Wesleyan10.........................Bremen

1..............................Dalton2......Johnson-Gainesville3.............................. Grady4........................ LaGrange5........Southeast Whitfield6....................... Columbus7....... Northwest Whitfield8......................... Spalding9........................Chestatee10............................Marist

1..............................Marist2......................... Veterans3....................... Columbus4.............................. Grady5....................... Alexander6......................... Spalding7...........Heritage-Catoosa8.....................River Ridge9............................... Cairo10..................... Chamblee

1...................................AIS2............ Hebron Christian3.......... First Presbyterian4...... Fellowship Christian5........Pinecrest Academy6..........Our Lady of Mercy7............................Paideia8..................... Brookstone9............................ Walker10................. Mount Paran

1... First Presbyterian Day2............ Hebron Christian3.................... Calvary Day4..... Providence Christian5............................Paideia6...... Fellowship Christian7................Pace Academy8.............. Holy Innocents’9............................ Walker10...... Mt. Paran Christian

Score Atlanta/AJC Soccer RankingsAAAAAA Boys AAAAAA GirlsAAA Boys AAA Girls

AAAAA Boys AAAAA GirlsAA Boys AA Girls

AAAA Boys AAAA GirlsA Boys A Girls

1...................... Lambert2.....................Parkview3.........................Walton4............Mountain View5...............West Forsyth

1................. Whitewater2.....................Allatoona3.......... Houston County4....................Hardaway5................... Loganville

1..........................Marist2............... Crisp County3....................Columbus4.............. Worth County5..........................Redan

6........................ Etowah7...................Tift County8...........Kennesaw Mtn.9.......................... Milton10.............. East Coweta

6.................. Greenbrier7.................. Gainesville8.................. Starr’s Mill9..................Sprayberry10...............Stephenson

6.....................Columbia7...............Locust Grove8......................Veterans9..........................Griffin10..................Carrollton

Score Atlanta/AJC High School Baseball Rankings

Class AAAAAA1......................... Buford2............ Blessed Trinity3.................Pike County4............. Pierce County5..................... Thomson

6.....................St. Pius X7..................... Callaway8...................Chapel Hill9....................North Hall10........ Jackson County

Class AAA

Class AAAAA1.....................Jefferson2............... Westminster3....................... Bremen4.......................Calhoun5.................... Wesleyan

6.......................... Lovett7............................Cook8.................Benedictine9....................Fitzgerald10.....................Bowdon

Class AA

Class AAAA1............................ELCA2............... Mount Paran3................ Charlton Co.4............Pace Academy5........ King’s Ridge Chr.

6......... Athens Christian7...............................ECI8.............Schley County9................. Brookstone10............. Hawkinsville

Class A

#NuclearCowboyz

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Page 10: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

10 SCORE ATLANTA | www.ScoreAtl.com

Steve Calhoun is a top five college football quarterback guru according to Bleacher

Report. His modest start as a QB in California has taken him from Santa Ana College to New Mexico State, and nearly ten years as a pro in Germany. He ultimately landed in coaching in 2005 and has been at it ever since teaching the art of playing quarterback and receiver as the lead instructor and owner of Armed & Danger-ous Football. Calhoun’s pupils hail from all over the country. His prize student at the time happens to be Russell Wilson, yes the Russell Wilson of the Superbowl Champion Seattle Seahawks. His other NFL QB students include – E.J. Man-ual (Bills), Nick Foles (Eagles), Mike Glennon (Buccaneers), and Terrelle Pryor (Raiders). E.J. Manual says, “Steve pushed me to

new heights in just a few workouts, and told me what I needed to hear, not necessarily what I wanted to hear. That’s what you want from your coach when you want to be great. Armed & Dangerous is the real deal.” Every week Calhoun can be found con-ducting camps for QBs, WRs, TEs and RBs in and around Southern California. A visit to his website armedanddangerousfootball.com re-veals the extent of his training regimen. Because he’s worked with some of the best young QBs in the nation Calhoun is a regular instructor at the Manning Passing Academy each year. Playing QB at the pro, collegiate, high school and middle school level requires one thing – great mechanics. Calhoun provides hands on detail in-structions guaranteed to improve your skills. Af-ter a brief instruction period students will have a

lot to take home to work with. “Steve Calhoun is a great coach and great friend of mine. His passion and attention to detail in coaching the quarterback position is second to none. To this day I credit a lot of my recent success and work ethic to him”, said Keith Price, University of Washington Huskies QB (2009-13). Calhoun has some connections to the state of Georgia through relatives, Deshaun Watson, Clemson signee and former UGA backup Christian Lemay and has always come out to conduct camps with friends at Riverside Academy in Gainesville each year. For the first time, Calhoun is conducting his own camp entitled The Premiere QB Camp in the Coun-try at Chestatee High School in Gainesville, Georgia April 26 and 27. The camp is designed for middle school (6th – 8th grade) and high school (9th – 12th grade) quarterbacks. Space is limited to 50 QBs in each group. Players are encouraged to register online at http://armed-anddangerousfootball.com. When collegiate players are getting ready for the NFL Combine they call Calhoun. Your young QB has a chance to be instructed by the “NFL Combine Ready Coach” don’t miss out. Photos courtesy of Armed and Dangerous Football.

ARMED AND DANGEROUS FOOTBALL

BY JAMES REESE

TOP QB COACH BRINGS HIS CAMP TO GEORGIA FOR THE FIRST TIME

Page 11: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

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12 SCORE ATLANTA | www.ScoreAtl.com

Georgia athletic director Greg McGarity has confirmed that there have been discussions

with the University of Notre Dame about a possi-ble home-and-home series between the Bulldogs and the Irish. Sources of CBSSports.com cite pos-sible games in 2018-19. McGarity played it cool when asked about a matchup with Notre Dame. “We talk with a lot of institutions about future scheduling and Notre Dame is one of them,” McGarity told the AJC on Tuesday. “But we’re not going to play these things out in pub-lic unless we have something in writing, and we have nothing in writing.” Georgia’s sched-ules are only slated through the 2015 season, but that can change at any time. UGA and Notre Dame last met on January 1, 1981 in the Sugar Bowl. That was probably the most significant game in UGA football his-tory and it marked the last National Champion-ship for the Bulldogs in football. Led by fresh-man running back Herschel Walker, Georgia won the game 17-10.

Georgia State’s football team is in its last week of spring practice and head coach

Trent Miles is happy with the progress the Panthers have made. Miles likes that the team has gone back to basics and has worked hard to improve its fundamentals. He saw this as one of Georgia State’s downfalls late in games last season, when poor tackling allowed for deficits to become insurmountable and a lack run blocking kept the running game from es-tablishing itself. The main focus in practice has been work-ing on technique to keep players in proper po-sition and using the right footwork for each scenario. Last season the players understood the concepts the coaching staff was present-ing, but they did not have the proper technique and fundamentals to execute what was re-quired of them.

OFFENSIVE LINE DEPTH … Four new players have impressed coaches along the offensive line and have made waves

After a damaging four-game losing streak that included three losses to ACC-rival

Pittsburgh and one to Mercer, the Jackets are back on track. Tech swept Duke over the week-end in Atlanta and dominated Georgia South-ern Tuesday after beating Georgia State mid-week to end the losing skid. Daniel Spingola was the hero in two of the games over the weekend. The junior from Roswell hit a homer and had two RBIs in the series-opening 7-4 win, then knocked in the game-winning run in a 1-0 victory in Game 3. The Jackets trailed 4-0 after three, but rallied behind Spingola’s hitting to take a 7-4 lead af-ter six innings. Matthew Gorst, Jonathan Rob-erts and Sam Clay combined to shut Duke out in the final five innings of the game. Matthew Grimes pitched six shutout in-nings in the third game of the series and im-proved his record to 4-1. Sam Clay notched his third save. Game 2 saw A.J. Murray get three hits and knock in three runs and Matt Gonzalez

Kennesaw State’s baseball team wanted to end its road trip on a good note with a series

win against Florida Gulf Coast last weekend. That did not quite happen, but while Florida Gulf Coast won the first game 5-0 and the second 4-3, the Owls were able to salvage the third contest on Sunday with an 11-9 win. The Owls managed to be productive on offense and take advantage of FGCU mistakes during Sunday’s series finale. KSU tallied 13 hits while the Eagles committed seven errors. After two innings, the Eagles were up 3-0 and they increased their lead 6-1 after four innings. The Owls, however, cut the lead to two after the fifth inning thanks to a two-run single by Jacob Bruce. They took the lead in the sixth in-ning after scoring six runs and that proved to be the difference. Bruce, Max Pentecost, Chris McGowan and Bo Way each drove in two runs for Ken-nesaw State. Bruce also tallied three hits and two runs in the win. The Owls are back at home this weekend as they face Stetson for a three-game set.

DIAMOND NOTES … The Bulldogs baseball team defeated #14 Clemson 6-2 on Tuesday. Patrick Boling tossed a career-high 7.2 innings, giving up five hits, two runs and striking out six. Pete Nagel came on in relief to complete the final inning and 1/3. Nagel struck out two, while giving up no runs and no hits. Hunter Cole led the hitting attack with three hits and four RBI. The third baseman hit his second homerun of the season in the first inning to give the Bulldogs a 1-0 lead. Cole would lead a two-out rally in the second inning with a big two-run single that helped UGA gain a 5-0 lead. Shortstop Nelson Ward contributed with two hits and two RBIs. Ward hit a two-run double during the four-run second inning that essentially sealed the game early for Georgia. Ward leads the team with 23 RBI this season.

HOOPS RECRUITING COUP … Coach Mark Fox has been criticized for his inability to recruit big-name players to Athens, but the Bulldogs received good news on Sat-urday when two highly-regarded players com-mitted to Georgia. Power forward Yante Maten of Bloomfield Hills, Mich., and Fred Iduwe of Birmingham, Ala., each pledged to sign with Georgia. Maten was especially a big pull, as he had offers from Michigan State and Indiana. Stephen Black contributed to this report.

in practice to garner consideration for the two-deep offensive line depth chart. Freshman Alex Stoehr has progressed more quickly than coaches anticipated and probably will forgo his redshirt and play as a freshman. Junior College transfers Michael Ivory, Taylor Evans and Steve Wolgamott are also alternating between the first and second teams. Ivory and Wolgamott are competing at the two tackle positions and Evans is in the battle for the starting center spot. Leading tackler Joe Peterson has put on 20 pounds that he is hoping will allow him the ability to shed blocks and finish tackles more effectively this season. Coaches have noticed a big difference in the linebacker during prac-tices and scrimmages. The final practice of the spring will occur at Panthersville this Saturday as part of Geor-gia State’s “All Blue, All In Day.” This will be an opportunity for the fans to see the improve-ments Georgia State has made this spring and see the new faces on the team.

BASEBALL SPLITS … The baseball team took the middle con-test of a three-game series at Arkansas-Little Rock last weekend. In between 14-7 and 9-2 losses, Georgia State survived a 3-2 battle on Saturday. Chase Raffield hit a home run and had two RBIs in the victory. Nathan Bates al-lowed no earned runs in 6.1 innings of work to get the win, while Kevin Burgee pitched 2.2 in-nings of relief with just one run surrendered. The Panthers are hosting Texas-Arlington for a three-game set this weekend.

also had three hits in the 5-1 shellacking of the Blue Devils. Devin Stanton (2-1) earned the win with six innings of shutout ball and four strike-outs. Tech crushed Georgia Southern 13-2 Tues-day night in Atlanta to extended the winning streak to five. The Jackets scored seven runs in the fifth inning to bury the visiting Eagles. Ben Parr got the win after pitching six innings of one-run ball. Next up for coach Danny Hall’s team is a weekend series in Atlanta against No. 1 Florida State.

RUNNER HONORED … Georgia Tech runners have been recog-nized by the ACC in consecutive weeks after Brandon Lasater placed second in the 800-me-ter run and anchored the winning 800-meter relay team at the Florida Relays in Gainesville Saturday. Laseter was named ACC Track and Field performer of the week after his outstand-ing performance. Sprinter Broderick Snoddy won the 100-meter run with a time of 10.28 to win the event at last week’s Yellow Jacket Invi-tational and was also named Performer of the Week by the league.

SPRING GAME … Georgia Tech’s football team will host its annual “Friday Night on the Flats” spring game on April 18. The inter-squad game will kick off at 7 p.m. to an ESPN3 audience. Pregame ac-tivities will begin at 5 p.m. on campus. After the game, fireworks will light up the sky.

NEW COACH … Head football coach Brian Bohannon an-nounced last week the hiring of Jim Kiritsy as the director of strength and conditioning. Kirit-sy will be responsible for developing a player development program that will achieve three primary goals: injury prevention, athletic per-formance enhancement and mental discipline development. “I am very excited to have the opportunity to help build this program with coach Bohan-non,” Kiritsy told ksuowls.com. “Starting a pro-gram from the ground up is a strength coach’s dream and I look forward to all of the challeng-es and firsts that we will experience in the next couple years.” Kiritsy was previously at The Citadel, where he was the associate director of strength and conditioning. He was responsible for co-ordinating the men’s basketball and wrestling training programs. Before that he spent two seasons at Vermont, where he was the assis-tant strength and conditioning coach.

SANSING HONORS LEGEND … Head baseball coach Mike Sansing was at Turner Field on Tuesday to honor Braves legend Hank Aaron’s 40th anniversary his 715th home run. Sansing presented Aaron with specialized number 44 KSU jersey in honor of breaking the home run record. As a matter of fact, Sansing was actually in attendance back on April 8, 1974, when Aaron hit home run No. 715 at Ful-ton County Stadium.

UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA

GEORGIA STATE

GEORGIA TECH

KENNESAW STATE

BY JOE DEIGHTON | [email protected]

BY JAY UNDERWOOD | [email protected]

BY STEPHEN BLACK | [email protected]

BY BRIAN JONES | [email protected]

DAWGS DISCUSS SERIES WITH IRISH; BASEBALL TEAM ON ROLL

FOOTBALL TEAM MAKING STRIDES IN SPRING PRACTICE

JACKETS END SKID, ON FIVE-GAME WINNING STREAK

FOOTBALL HIRES NEW COACH; SANSING HONORS AARON

Page 13: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

13Vol. 10 Iss. 14 | April 11-17, 2014

This week has been an eventful one for the Hawks. They were bumped from the

eighth seed by the Knicks after Wednesday’s 105-92 loss at home to the Chicago Bulls, co-inciding with the Knicks’ win over cross-town rival Brooklyn. The Hawks had no time to lick their wounds, as they had to hit the floor Fri-day against Cleveland. The Hawks started fast, scoring 39 points in the first quarter and lead-ing 62-49 at the half. Jeff Teague and Paul Mill-sap performed to their normal standards, but the story was reserve forward Mike Scott who hit 12-of-13 shots from the field in 20 minutes to score 26 points for the Hawks. Two days later the Hawks traveled to East-ern Conference-power Indiana. The Hawks car-ried the momentum from their previous game and held the Pacers to just 23 points in the first half, and just 88 for the game. Jeff Teague’s 25 points led five Hawks in double figures. De-Marre Carroll’s gave a spectacular defensive performance, holding Pacers star Paul George

The Atlanta Braves fell to 4-3 on the sea-son with a 4-0 loss to the New York Mets

in the 2014 Turner Field opener on Tuesday night. Aaron Harang, who picked up a win in a scoreless outing last week at Milwaukee, kept Atlanta in it by allowing only one run on two hits in six innings. His offense, however, could not find the scoreboard despite mustering a re-spectable eight hits. “[Harang] was good,” manager Fredi Gon-zalez told the Atlanta Journal Constitution. “A second outing in a row which he gave us a great opportunity to win the game. He gave up two hits, punched out nine, gave up one run; I don’t think you can ask for much more than that.” The Braves can ask for more from their hitters after seven games. Atlanta has scored 15 runs as of Wednesday afternoon, which is dead last in the majors. The Braves have crossed the plate a grand total of one time in their three losses.

The Falcons added two capable starters to the secondary on Tuesday by signing safety

Dwight Lowery and cornerback Josh Wilson. William Moore, a 2012 Pro Bowler, was pre-viously the only safety on the Falcons’ roster with significant experience and Lowery will add much-needed depth. Lowery is a former 2008 fourth-round pick and he put up solid numbers with Jacksonville after being traded by the Jets in 2011. The 5-11 defensive back has 41 career starts with 217 total tackles, 10 interceptions and 45 passes defensed. Jacksonville released Lowery this past season after he went on in-jured reserve following starts in the team’s first three games. Wilson is a former second-round pick (55th overall) by Seattle in the 2006 NFL Draft. His career took him to Baltimore in 2010 before landing down the road with the Wash-ington Redskins for the 2011-12 and 2012-13 seasons. Wilson has seen action in 102 ca-reer games and has 81 starts with 399 career tackles, 14 interceptions, 11 fumble recoveries,

The Gwinnett Gladiators came up just short of sweeping a home-and-home with

Greenville last week. In the first game at home on Friday, the Gladiators demolished the Road Warriors 7-3. The score was tied 1-1 after the opening period, but the Glads scored three goals in both the second and third to pull away. Forward Mike Merrifield scored two goals and Eriks Sevcenko tallied four assists to lead Gwinnett to the lopsided win. Merrifield and Sevcenko were acquired by the Gladiators in a trade for fan-favorite Evan Bloodoff and Rob Kwiet back on March 12. In the 11 games since the trade, Merrifield has six goals and five as-sists. Sevcenko has seven assists. Of note, when the Gladiators are leading after two periods, their record is 20-0. They did not have the lead after two periods when they traveled to Greenville one day later. The 4-3 contest was competitive in just about every department, with each team putting 34 shots on goal. Dirk Southern scored his 16th goal of

to just 6-of-17 shooting. The two-game winning streak combined with a second Knicks loss gave the Hawks a two-game lead over the Knicks with just five games remaining for the Hawks and four remaining for the Knicks. Unfortunate-ly, the Hawks could not extend their hold on the eighth seed Tuesday, as they fell to the Pistons 102-95. Former Hawk Josh Smith did not play, but Andre Drummond picked up the slack with 19 points and 17 rebounds.

PLAYOFFS PROJECTION … With five games left and a 1.5-game lead over the Knicks prior to Wednesday’s show-down with Boston, the Hawks will face Brook-lyn and Miami over the weekend. Those two teams have their seeds clinched and may rest some players against the Hawks. Miami has not yet clinched the No. 1 seed, however, In-diana coach Frank Vogel essentially conceded the one seed to the Heat earlier this week. Heading into the weekend, the Heat may al-ready have the one seed and decide to rest their players as well. Although it may be unlikely, if a playoff berth came down to the last day, the Hawks would play the worst team in the NBA, the Mil-waukee Bucks, and the Knicks would be faced with the Toronto Raptors, who would most likely still be battling for positioning. If you are a Hawks fan, you have to be confident in their chances to clinch their seventh straight playoff appearance.

HONORING AARON … Prior to Tuesday’s game, the Braves hon-ored Hank Aaron on the 40th anniversary of his 715th home run that broke Babe Ruth’s record. Aaron received a personalized jersey from each of Atlanta’s professional sports teams and from several local universities. Signs com-memorating every one of Aaron’s 715 homers were held up by fans in the outfield. Among the notable attendees were Bobby Cox, John Schuerholz, Arthur Blank, Vince Dooley, Bill Curry, Al Downing (gave up Aaron’s famous blast) and Dusty Baker (was on deck when Aaron hit it). “I believe Hank Aaron was ideally suited to become Babe Ruth’s heir,” Major League Base-ball commissioner Bud Selig told the crowd. “He is the living embodiment of the American spirit. When you think of the impact, just like the impact Jackie Robinson had, here was a man breaking the most famous sports record in the world. We were lucky. Baseball was re-ally lucky. You had this thoughtful, sensitive, really decent person [breaking the record]. So we were the ones who were lucky. He is what you hope an icon will be but often isn’t.” “Hank is a part of our family,” Schuerholz told the team’s website. “He’s the face of our franchise and the face of baseball’s greatness. You don’t get a chance to honor a man of this magnitude who is a part of your family and your organization very often.”

nine forced fumbles, five sacks and 71 passes defensed. He started all 16 games for Wash-ington last season and posted a career-high 93 tackles. Wilson registered four solo tackles in the Georgia Dome last season during Atlanta’s 27-26 win over the Redskins. The Falcons man-aged just 189 passing yards that game against Wilson and the Washington secondary.

ON THE GRIND … Offseason workouts started for seven NFL teams on Monday. Any team that hired a new head coach this offseason was granted a two-week head start on Phase 1 of the league’s off-season workouts, which includes meetings and conditioning work. Cleveland (Mike Pettine), Detroit (Jim Caldwell), Houston (Bill O’Brien), Minnesota (Mike Zimmer), Tampa Bay (Lovie Smith), Tennessee (Ken Whisenhunt) and Washington (Jay Gruden) are the seven teams with Phase 1 underway. The Falcons’ first day is April 21 and official team activities (OTAs) will be held May 27-29, June 2-4 and June 10-13.

COFFMAN GONE … Reserve tight end Chase Coffman was in-formed last Thursday that the Falcons would not offer the five–year pro a new contract. In two seasons with the Falcons, Coffman played behind Tony Gonzalez in 16 regular-season games and caught one pass for 12 yards. Coff-man’s postseason highlights included an acro-batic 16-yard catch at the goal line during the 2012 playoff win against the Seahawks.

the year and the Northern Michigan University product now has 38 points for Gwinnett this season. The Glads came up just short of tying the game in the waning moments with their goalie pulled for the sixth attacker.

BACK TO THE WELL … Defenseman Justin Weller was reassigned to the Gladiators from the AHL’s Portland Pi-rates last week. Weller played in three games for Portland after being called up on March 8. The 22-year old appeared in 41 games with Gwinnett this year, scoring two goals and add-ing seven assists. The Alberta native also has 34 penalty minutes while managing to stay on the plus side with a + 2 rating. The move for Weller also meant the release of defenseman Nolan Descoteaux.

LAST HURRAH … It has been a long and at times frustrat-ing season in Gwinnett. However, the Glads have been playing their best hockey of the year over the past month and are looking to end the season positively. The team is playing its final two games of the year against Elmira this week at home. Wednesday’s result was not avail-able at press time, while the finale will come on Saturday. The Jackals head into Gwinnett having lost 12 of their last 13 games. These are two games Gwinnett can win and should win for all the fans who have stuck with the team throughout this season.

ATLANTA HAWKS

ATLANTA BRAVES

ATLANTA FALCONS

GWINNETT GLADIATORS

BY ROBERT TINTER | [email protected]

BY RICKY DIMON | [email protected]

BY CRAIG SAGER II | [email protected]

BY JOE DEIGHTON | [email protected]

HAWKS LIKELY TO CONTINUE PLAYOFF STREAK

BRAVES LOSE HOME OPENER TO METS

SECONDARY ADDS TWO POSSIBLE STARTERS

GWINNETT FINISHING ECHL SEASON STRONG

Page 14: Score Atlanta Vol. 10 Issue 14

14 SCORE ATLANTA | www.ScoreAtl.com

MAKE YOUR OCCASION

A SUCCESS!Great rates! Book your date!

? TRIVIA ANSWER

THE LAST TIME THE BRAVES WERE SHUT OUT IN THEIR

HOME OPENER WAS 1990, AN 8-0 LOSS TO SAN FRANCISCO.

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