MAC Cosmetics with Gordon Espinet backstage during FIT Future of Fashion Show 2012

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Central New York Golf Guide 2012: Moving brazen to grow diversion opposite back trend – The Post-Standard

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On the surface, the statistics are scary.

Golf in the United States suffered a net detriment of about 1 million players per year from 2007 to 2010 (about 3 million in and 4 million out each year), before cutting the decrease to 400,000 waste last year.

raquo Six ways to make the diversion more fun

raquo Golf's beauty is in the eye of the beholder

raquo 2012 Local golf schedule

raquo Course changes in Onondaga county

raquo Course changes in CNY

raquo Charirty golf schedule

More than 800 courses, mostly small, daily-fee facilities, sealed inhabitant from 2000-09, along with a record 157 closures in 2011.

Only 19 new courses non-stop opposite America last year, a continued improvement from the overgrowth of construction from 1986-2005, when more than 4,500 golf comforts were built inhabitant in expectation of a players’ bang that never occurred.

Combined, it might make you think that the ancient diversion is about to make a delayed but solid exodus from the face of the planet.

It isn’t that bad, yet. There are still 26.2 million golfers inhabitant assisting drive a $76 billion attention that employs 2 million workers, according to the National Golf Foundation. Worldwide, the diversion is flourishing at a quick gait in several Asian markets, quite China and India.

But like the ever-fluctuating batch market, golf in America has entered a time of adjustment. That’s a fact straightforwardly famous by guardians of the game, evidenced by the flurry of proposals they’ve released in the past 12 months. All are designed to spin the sport’s bearish retrogression into a bullish rebirth.

Inside this edition — The Post-Standard’s 15th annual Golf Guide — we’ll take a look at many of the suggestions to make the diversion more beguiling for recreational golfers and beginners.

The ideas operation from the sublime: enlivening normal hackers to “Tee It Forward” by relocating up a set up tees rather than back to championship markers; to the ridiculous: swelling the golf hole from 4.25 inches in hole to a cavernous 15 inches. The most advantageous proposals are directed at attracting new players with cost-friendly packages of lessons and introducing youngsters to the diversion while they are still in class propagandize — and before they have selected to take up other time-consuming sports.

Call it Golf 2.0, a tenure being waved by the PGA of America in the latest grow-the-game initiative, but one that also can ring suggestions made by The First Tee and golf icons Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer. If lofty goals are met, the United States could have 40 million golfers — 10 million more than the rise in 2003 and 14 million more than it has now — by 2020, pronounced Malone Golf Club conduct pro Derek Sprague, the PGA of America’s secretary and designated inhabitant boss for the 2015-16 term, when golf will turn an Olympic sport.

While daunting, if you look at total prepared for the PGA in a Boston Consulting Group study, it positively seems probable to at slightest stop the bleeding.

“The investigate shows that there are 90 million people who have played the diversion at one point,” Sprague pronounced during the new Central New York PGA open meeting. “The investigate asked these folks if they were meddlesome in personification again, and 61 million pronounced they were.”

The big doubt is, what will move them back?

Basically, more fun in a shorter volume of time, Sprague said.

Many quit the diversion for the apparent reasons. It takes too long to play. There are too many other time-swallowing family commitments with children’s activities. The game’s too difficult. The rules, the courses and the custom at some comforts are too intimidating. The probability of annoyance is too likely. The cost for a private membership can’t be fit when members “do the math” and learn that their 20 rounds per year results in profitable $200 per turn for a $4,000 annual fee.

Sprague and others are assured that many of these obstacles can be addressed by providing affordable instruction to beginners to cut down on their training curve, cutting courses, not insisting that a turn of golf be 18 holes, pitching golf as a family sport, and holding a more loose perspective about the manners with beginners.

In essence, plead reforms to make a slow-paced outdoor diversion a bit faster, a bit more fun and a bit more in balance with today’s universe of evident gratification.

Critics might disagree that it’s just an try to reticent down a diversion that never appealed to more than 11 percent of the race at the rise (30.6 million U.S. golfers in 2003). Proponents, like Sprague, opposite that tortuous tradition a bit to secure the destiny is value it.

Only time — changed time — will tell if golf’s decrease (or correction) will continue.

Chris Wagner can be reached at 470-3036 or cwagner@syracuse.com

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Golf’s beauty is in eye of onlooker – The Post-Standard

After my first turn of the deteriorate in early March, we had a Facebook discuss with an old crony who had accompanied me to Scotland some 30 years ago during an agenda-less, month-long merriment that resulted in personification St. Andrews’ Jubilee Course one noted afternoon.

My contention of my new turn overwhelmed not at all on my shots or score. Instead, we wrote about the consternation of personification golf in such good conditions so early in March. The beauty of saying two hawks floating in flapless flight. The philharmonic of eyeing a soft-pawed fox as he quizzically eyed me from the corner of the woods. The never-tiring sovereignty of how vast and how bright-star white a golf round appears opposite a blue sky blank of humidity.

“It was just a pleasing day to be on the golf course,” we wrote.

My crony now shot back, “This is entrance from a man who once said, ‘The only pretty things on a golf course are birdies and pars.’”

Well, obviously, the middle-age decrease of my diversion has altered what we conclude about golf. But at slightest we still suffer it (most of the time).

That positively isn’t the box with millions of over golfers, who have given up the diversion over the years for such reasons as miss of time, miss of fun and miss of viewed party value. Since 2003, the number of players in the United States has forsaken from 30.6 million to 26.2 million.

Many consternation presumably the tailspin is negligence or has just begun. Continued mercantile struggles don’t assistance matters, but there is a distant more worrisome cause at play for golf than affordable greens fees (which you’ll find are very affordable in Central New York by the annuity of 18-hole greens fees that are still underneath $20).

No, golf’s biggest competition streamer into the destiny is not a cost point but the ever-accelerating enlightenment of present gratification. “Right now” is no longer discerning enough for a universe driven by an Internet pacemaker set to manic mode. That mindset is the discord of what is indispensable to suffer personification a process and formidable outdoor diversion that final long stretches of calm and humility.

In truth, golf has never been an activity enjoyed by everyone. And it really isn’t an acquired taste, but rather a adore at first sight. You presumably immediately turn feeling with spasmodic being means to make the round go distant and where you want it to go, or you fast establish that you’d like a sport, diversion or hobby that offers more coherence and control.

That said, those once soothing by golf can positively acquire a antipathy for it. Endless 5½-hour weekend rounds on courses clearly set up for the last 18 holes of a U.S. Open can do that, generally when there are more dire family duties available at home.

Addressing those problems is a big idea of golf’s stewards, who have due mixed initiatives in the past 12 months to give the diversion a boost. Some are sound (like enlivening people to play brazen tees), some are interesting, but presumably formidable to exercise (like 12-hole rounds) and some are officious crazy (like supersized golf holes).

The best gamble is to simply deliver the diversion to as many people — generally children — as possible. If story shows us anything, it’s that a tolerable commission of newcomers will tumble in adore with the lifelong diversion and continue to find something pleasing enough on the course to move them back — even if their pars have incited into admiring the soothing paws of a fox and their birdies have morphed into hawks.

Education notes: News from schools nearby you

Education notes

DAKOTA COUNTY

--
Destination ImagiNation teams from two Inver Grove Heights schools - Salem Hills Elementary and Simley High School - competent for the tellurian foe May 23-26 in Knoxville, Tenn. The foe teaches students extend and record through teamwork and problem-solving.

--
Nicole McGuire and Michelle Gustafson, counselors at Boeckman Middle School in Farmington, perceived a Program of Promise Award from the Minnesota School Counselors Association. The endowment recognizes effective doing of inhabitant propagandize conversing standards.

RAMSEY COUNTY

-- The Academic Bowl Team from Metro Deaf School, St. Paul, warranted seventh place out of 80 teams at the inhabitant Academic Bowl competition. Seniors Karielle Larson and Linzie Fuechtmann, sophomore Amanda Jo Temple and beginner Raelyn Fuechtmann represented the propagandize in 4 days of foe at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C.

--
Raven Pillmann, a comparison at St. Paul Central High School and a member in the college prep module Breakthrough St. Paul, perceived the Bill and Melinda Gates Millennium Scholarship. The rival extend offers a giveaway float at any college or university of the student's choice. Pillmann skeleton to attend Carleton College in Northfield, Minn.

-- The Minnesota State University Student Association

and the Jared P. Stene Student Leadership Scholarship Board famous Francis Ray Cristobal for his joining to tyro care at Metropolitan State University. Cristobal, who is posterior a bachelor's grade in aviation management, serves as a tyro senator and boss of the International Student Organization.

-- The Concert Choir and the Concert Chorale from North High School, North St. Paul, perceived higher ratings in state competition, as did 28 out of 35 events from the North choir program. Choir members will perform a unison at 7 p.m. May 22 in the propagandize auditorium. Each choir will perform apart numbers, some solos and ensembles who perceived higher ratings will perform, and the unison will interpretation with songs from "The Lion King."

-- Students from the White Bear Lake Area Learning Center warranted bullion and china ribbons in consumer knowledge, advertising, problem-solving and interviewing events in MAPP Stars foe sponsored by the Minnesota Association of Alternative Programs.

-- The tyro legislature from White Bear Lake Area High School-South Campus was named Outstanding Student Council of the Year by the Minnesota Association of Student Councils. Adviser Mary Dahle was famous for her 35 years of use to the state organisation and for receiving a lifetime use endowment from the National Association of Student Councils.

WASHINGTON COUNTY

-- Students from St. Croix Valley Area Learning Center, Stillwater, presented an original puppet uncover about bullying to third-grade students at Andersen Elementary, Bayport, and Lake Elmo Elementary. The students who achieved as puppeteers were Sam Breidel, Logan Geary, Shantel Yeager, Kennedy Klingbeil, Heather Oswald, Gerae Christensen-Carver and Ben McCarthy. ALC clergyman Lori Delahunt used a extend from the Partnership Plan to deliberate with veteran puppeteers from Z Rosenschnoz Puppetry in Minneapolis, who helped students with the presentation.

--
St. Croix Catholic School, Stillwater, perceived a $20,000 extend from Project Lead the Way to exercise the organization's Gateway to Technology module for center propagandize students. Funds will be used to buy materials and apparatus for hands-on, project-based classes. The propagandize will start charity the module in the fall, with Audrey Anderson as lead teacher, assisted by Nancy Donlon and Beth Lilja.

-- The Education Foundation awarded grants for record tools to 3 teachers in South Washington County schools. Recipients are Catherine Feltes, an early-childhood clergyman at Bailey Elementary, Woodbury, for a listening center; Lynn O'Driscoll, a business clergyman at East Ridge High School, Woodbury, for diversion growth software; and Josh Eidem, a sixth-grade clergyman at Cottage Grove Middle School, for MP3 players.

-- 3M awarded South Washington County schools four "Ingenuity" grants totaling more than $38,000. Megan Zachman of Middleton Elementary, Woodbury, perceived $7,000 for a Lego program; Molly Lester of Newport Elementary perceived $10,300 for a Lego program; Logan Carstensen of Lake Middle School, Woodbury, perceived $10,300 for hands-on extend materials; and Michelle Grubbs of Cottage Grove Middle School perceived $10,200 for life extend category supplies.

-- Four students from South Washington County schools were comparison to attend in Girls State, a weeklong supervision and citizenship training event to be hold at Bethel University, Arden Hills. They are Grace Blomgren and Greta Tank of Park High School, Cottage Grove; Olivia Hoffmann of Woodbury High School; and Pari Cariaga of East Ridge High School, Woodbury. The girls were comparison and will be sponsored by the St. Paul Park American Legion Auxiliary.

EAST METRO

-- Eighteen students have been comparison by the Medtronic Foundation to accept four-year scholarships totaling $16,000, as well as support services to assistance them in their collegiate studies. East-metro students embody Jean Diaz and Amanda Weitgenant of Blaine High School; Rebecca Bluhm and Angelica Toledo of Columbia Heights High School; Andrea Deerberg and Hawi Tilahune of Coon Rapids High School; Damaris Santiago Ojeda and Meian Yu of Fridley High School; Jordan Anderson and Matthew Johnson of Irondale High School, New Brighton; Holly Israelson and Matthew Wildes of Mounds View High School, Arden Hills; and Erich Erdmann and Vivian Nguyen of Spring Lake Park High School. This is the fifth year of the Medtronic Scholars program, which has committed $1.4 million to internal students.

Information for Education Notes can be sent to Mila Koumpilova, mkoumpilova@pioneerpress.com, for St. Paul schools; Christopher Magan, cmagan@pioneerpress.com for Dakota County schools; Megan Boldt, mboldt@pioneer press.com, for Washington County schools; David Knutson, dknutson@pioneerpress.com, for north suburbs schools; and Andy Rathbun, arathbun@pioneerpress.com, for Wisconsin schools.

Mills: Environmental extremists will have purpose in government

The new abdication of the informal executive of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) signaled a fulfilment by the Obama administration that Congress and the American people were not going to endure the bullying strategy implemented by the EPA. As a matter of fact, members of Congress have called for a full review of the coercion policies used by the EPA and other sovereign agencies.

However, Americans, generally those who find themselves underneath the regulatory powers of the EPA, should be discreet about presumption that the attitudes of regulators will change quickly. President Obama has a big domestic payback to environmental extremists that fanned the abandon opposite President George W. Bush and helped elect Obama in 2008.

Obama has alien many environmental extremists from such groups as the Sierra Club and the National Resources Defense Council directly into pivotal regulatory roles in Washington. They are smart, dedicated, and they will not give up.

Dr. Al Armendariz, the director from Region 6 in Dallas that quiescent on Apr 30, is a ideal example of the form of people recruited by the Obama administration to umpire industry. He warranted a Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina in 2002 and was a rising star in the environmental community. Armendariz took a position at Southern Methodist University in Dallas when an environmental organisation asked him to author a investigate of atmosphere emissions in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. The results of his investigate became very controversial, because he purported that atmosphere emissions from oil and gas operations in the Metroplex were aloft than car trade in the area.

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality countered his findings, while the oil and gas attention found his end laughable.

On the other hand, the Obama administration found his conclusions provocative. They hired him, and he went right to the tip of the segment that oversees the states that furnish and labour 70 percent of the wanton oil and healthy gas in the U.S. The EPA's Region 6 covers Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arkansas.

While EPA officials in Washington were bustling drafting new atmosphere glimmer and hydraulic fracturing restrictions, Armendariz was bustling perplexing to be "the new policeman in town," as the Sierra Club called him, and re-regulating the utilities, refineries and scrutiny and prolongation sectors of the appetite attention in Texas.

It didn't take long to find out that he had put a aim on the backs of the petroleum industry, and he was going after them. Some assume that the word came down from Washington that the Congress could not pass a cap-and-trade check that would theoretically revoke CO atmosphere emissions. If the President couldn't get a law passed, the administration would get it finished piece-by-piece through the regulatory process.

Hence came the assault of new regulations, rider of old regulations, coercion stretched and attempts to by-pass Texas regulatory agencies and their authority.

Texans — everybody from the administrator to the profession ubiquitous to the regulatory agencies — didn't take pleasantly to Armendariz's coercion tactics. They filed law suits, and they started to win and win big. The last box was the statute from the U.S. 5th Court of Appeals opposite the EPA when the EPA had authorized the stretchable needing routine combined by Texas regulators 18 years earlier, but underneath Armendariz's order the stretchable permits no longer met EPA criteria.

The final spike in the coffin came when U.S. Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), ranking member of the Environment and Public Works Committee, played a video of Armendariz articulate about the ongoing regulatory truth of the EPA, which was to make an example of people who allegedly were in defilement of EPA rules. Armendariz used the word "crucify" and put fear into those the EPA regulated.

What can be schooled from the last 30 months? The environmental extremists that assistance elect President Obama will continue to penetrate the sovereign supervision on a goal to umpire the hoary fuel producers into extinction.

Publinx golf is some-more than a travel in Forest Park – St. Louis Post

It's the first Sunday in May, boys and girls, and you know what that means.

At least, if you play golf and you've been around these tools for a few years you know what it means — it's Publinx Open time.

For the 53rd time, more than 240 players will accumulate on the golfing drift of Forest Park on Sunday to control the unaccepted opener of the St. Louis golf season. The first celebration of 5 will conduct on the way at 6:05 a.m., the last will try out around 1:45 p.m. Among them will be 42 pros, 92 seniors and 106 amateurs. Course superintendent Chad Carpenter has the Norman K. Probstein trickery in rise form.

"I've never seen the golf course better this time of year," contest executive John Kueper said.

Goals for the day will vary, from winning a esteem or winning a gamble to not using out of golf balls. The Publinx isn't so much a tradition as it is a existence show.

"There was the time a few years ago when a man was in the center of his backswing on the hole along Skinker," Kueper recalled. "All of a sudden, tires squealed and — bang! — a automobile collision took place right there by him.

"Of course, the man made an awful swing, almost missed the turn entirely. And he looked at the central and asked, 'I do get to strike that shot over, don't I?' They called me for a ruling. we said, 'Uh ... no, don't think that difference is in the order book.' Those are the kind of things that occur on a unchanging basement at the Park."

The contest has a discernible purpose. It raises supports to support a internal qualifier's outing to the U.S. Public Links Championship, which will be hold in Utah this summer. There also are purses involved, $1,200 for the professionals, present certificates for amateurs, bragging rights for the rest. And when the turn is over, there are red hots, beverages and camaraderie, the things that matter most.

The common golf notables will be on hand. Edwardsville pro Mike Suhre, who has won the veteran side of the contest 6 of the past 8 years, will be a favorite. Bob Gaus, a 14-time Publinx champion, also is in the mix.

Amateurs will embody long-lived contenders such as Phil Caravia, Pat Reardon and Craig "Count" Hardcastle. Among the seniors, dignitaries such as Terry Tessary, Don Bliss and Scott Thomas will tee it up. In between there will be fathers and sons, group and women, friends and rivals, good players and — well, eager players.

"We have such a cross-section of players," Kueper said. "We have guys who have groups that played in it for 35 years, the same people. We have territory pros and pros who aren't dependent with the territory at all. We have amateurs who want to play with their buddies, blemish players with 20-handicappers, you name it."

Jewelry engineer loves to examination – St. Louis Post

Stephanie Anne Kantis isn't your standard businesswoman. She doesn't have a five-year plan. She doesn't know if her business will look the same in a few years. And she isn't fearful to stone the boat.

The 1986 Ladue Horton Watkins High School grad, who now lives in Dallas, has a thriving, heterogeneous small business that ranges from home furnishings to high-end jewelry.

She started her career conceptualizing her possess line of cribs.

Most entrepreneurs quarrel to get something off the ground, and if they are sanctified with success they seat down and solve to keep that business going until retirement or . . . a multimillion-dollar buyout. Few cause dullness into the equation.

"I don't even know the judgment of staying the same," Kantis pronounced during a new revisit to deliver the valuables line in St. Louis. "I don't know life or how to live other than to change."

Change, learn, grow, adapt, explore, enjoy.

Kantis, 44, pronounced that a healthy oddity creates life value living.

And she's a vital covenant to the fact that carrying one success doesn't lessen your possibility of subsequent somewhere else.

Some people have the misperception that lightning, or rather good fortune, doesn't strike twice. But for Kantis, success follows good intentions.

She began her career by specializing in upscale children's furniture. Her disdainful crib designs and furnishings fast became prohibited commodities, and she stretched easily into conceptualizing and production bedding and accessories.

Kantis launched her first store in 1996. Stephanie Anne Room to Grow debuted in Dallas. It was a trendsetter years before there was a Pottery Barn Kids.

In 1998, she non-stop a second store in Houston.

By 1999 she was distributing the Stephanie Anne Room to Grow Collections through her possess catalog and one of the first baby seat and bed linen sites on the web.

Her indiscriminate placement bend began in 1999 as well. By 2001, she had more than 50 employees and was offered millions of dollars in sell annually.

But notwithstanding the accolades, and even a healthy luminary clientele, she couldn't assistance but tinker and change.

First accessories, lamps and musical items; then linens; then adult linens, then clothing, then high-end jewelry.

And just to assure you that the valuables is every bit as innovative as her past interior décor items, she recently got the stamp of capitulation from Neiman Marcus. The dialect store is carrying her Kaleidoscope valuables line online and in 14 stores, including the Plaza Frontenac plcae in St. Louis.

"I started valuables as a hobby, to relax, but shortly it's all we wanted to do," Kantis said. She calls her creations "mini-sculptures."

Her equipment are made of bronze, hand-dipped in 24-carat bullion and ornate with semi-precious stones. Her signature hooks and clasps are easy closures scripted from her initials "S" and "A." The outcome is valuables that's musical and versatile. The designs concede wearers to modify the object from choker to necklace, bracelets or belt.

And the match attracts shave onto the sequence for easy switches.

Her inspirations are Chanel meets Queen Elizabeth I. She was beguiled by the stately wealth of the Tudors.

Her line includes a value trove of showstopping pieces: vast sculpted pendants, cuffs and cocktail rings made of semi-precious stones and color-infused crystal. Her line ranges in cost from $125 for stout teardrop hoop earrings to $1,795 for a multi-stone climax ring that looks estimable of a queen's portrait.

Kantis knew it was time to pierce on from seat when she got wearied with normal youthful colors and began conceptualizing cribs flashy with black and velvet. She was longing something more mature.

She pronounced her business have grown accustomed to her experiments. Kantis pronounced that the "why'd you change blah, blah, blah" is not uncommon.

Her response is, "why not."

"Everyone is used to new things, the new iPhone, the new this, the new that, the new subsequent gadget, so because not give them something new" and let them confirm if they like it, Kantis said.

Still, she hasn't carried youthful seat products for 8 years and business ramble into her stores daily to ask for them. That's good news for the resale marketplace — she's beheld a arise in prices on her automobile cribs sole second-hand. Even her furnishings were putrescent with the same suggestion of change and adaptability.

She binds a number of patents for her cribs and children's beds that adjust as a child grows; they have fanciful headboards or side play so that they not only enhance in size but also easily modify from pinkish polka dots for a lady to blue for a baby boy.

So distant as Kantis is concerned, her business practices are not about changing for change's sake. She's creation room for herself and others to grow.

She sells what she likes, when she likes.

She pronounced she couldn't have illusory building a lifestyle pattern mini-empire.

And next? She'd like to pattern a automobile — a limited-edition automobile Porsche to be exact.

Lawyer dares NYPD: Catch me red-handed



What a Mass-hole!

A former Boston prosecutor on a electioneer opposite the NYPD was arrested for vandalizing City Hall — which he boasted about on his blog, sources told The Post.

Robert Constantino, 34, was destitute 4 days after notice fasten prisoner him stenciling sets of red hands and the words, “NYPD Get Your Hands Off Me” on the East Gate and another pillar.

The lawyer, who works for a downtown think tank, began his lush debauch Monday in Brownsville — where his harangue on the city’s stop-and-frisk process was not well received.

“How about you go the f--k back to Manhattan before we f--k you up?” a teen told him, according to his blog.

The activist, who lives in Crown Heights, then went to Manhattan and stared at the Wall Street bull, he said.

He staked it out for 5 hours, but gave up because cops “had that thing rhythmical like Fort Knox.”

Constantino staid for spraying his summary on pillars at City Hall around 3 a.m. Tuesday — anticipating to get held red-handed.

“I focussed over and picked up my things right as a military car, taxi, cab and military go-cart thing went by, all but somehow seeing that we was surrounded by red graffiti and holding a stencil lonesome in red paint.”

He even wore a Hugo Boss suit, an Yves Saint Laurent tie and Cole Haan wingtip boots to look good for court. But he wasn’t arrested until Friday.

cgiove@nypost.com

Host Chatt State No. 3 in clever segment field

  • photo

Jordy McDonald came from Down Under to play round for Chattanooga State.

Now he wants to finish on top.

McDonald has finished an superb pursuit at shortstop for the two-year program, and the Perth proprietor says he's severely enjoyed the possibility to "see places" quite different from Australia. But he would like zero more right now than to revisit Colorado for the first time after this month.

That is the site of the NJCAA World Series, where Chattanooga State wrapped up the 2010 season. As the Tigers horde other TCCAA teams in the Region VII contest this week, they are not the favorites but they are deliberate critical contenders for a mark in the four-team playoffs subsequent week opposite Georgia's tip two.

McDonald is a vital member with his .343 batting average, 17 extra-base hits, .476 on-base percentage, team-high 42 RBIs, 37 runs scored and team-high 129 assists with 55 putouts.

But he is distant from the only reason the Tigers (39-17, 17-10) had the third-best record in the joining that includes the nation's fourth- and 10th-ranked teams, Columbia State and Walters State. His sophomore double-play partner, Zach Zarzour from Ooltewah High School, is batting .383 with an .500 on-base commission and 58 runs to go with 36 RBIs, and catcher Matt Sorrow (.365), Daniel Tucker (.328), Isaac Garner (.344), Zach Lance (.343), Taylor Patterson (.333), Connor Gilbert (.299), and Tyler Garner (.284) are the other players with at slightest 130 image appearances.

Sorrow in sold has been a pleasing surprise, manager Greg Dennis said, not only with his batting normal but with his run production. He's had the eighth most at-bats but is fourth on the group in RBIs, with 29.

Patterson not only has been prolific offensively, tied with Zarzour for runner-up RBI honors on the team, but has been a pivotal part of the pitching staff that worries at slightest some hostile coaches more than the lineup. Working early in the deteriorate as the closer but of late as a starter, the beginner from Murray County has 37 strikeouts in 30 2/3 innings, a 2.05 warranted run normal and 4 of the team's 9 saves. He leads the Tigers pitchers in appearances with 18.

Freshman Tyler McClure from Blue Ridge, Ga., has pitched 71 1/3 innings, 18 more than the subsequent man on the staff, Dylan Massengill (5-4), with Carson Bryant 6-0 in 45 innings and progressing a 2.0 ERA. He has 8 starts to go with 12 for McClure, 9 every for Alex Ridge (7-3) and Trippp White and 7 for Massengill. The group ERA is 3.06.

"McClure positively has finished a good job, and Taylor Patterson has really come on," Dennis pronounced in his contention of pleasing surprises. "And Dylan was a sophomore who we didn't know how where he would fit in, but he's had a very good open for us.

"Adam Howard has finished a unusual pursuit with our pitchers, and [fellow partner coach] Joe Wingate does a good pursuit with the invulnerability and the hitters," Dennis said.

"It is a good fulfilment for this group to have the third best record in our conference. We're all freshmen on the pile solely for two, and then we mislaid Tyler Roach a third of the way to a season-ending injury. He was second-team all-conference last year.

"We had to forgive 5 players for educational situations, and that enclosed 3 starters and discussion arms. So we've had to understanding with some adversity, but we've stayed competitive."

Zarzour pronounced the Tigers "had high expectations entrance in" and refused to let the "distractions" change that.

"We fight. We're a tough team, and we've played well," pronounced the second baseman with the .631 "quality at-bat" percentage. "With our big margin we play kind of old-school small round with speed and defense, so we're used to scrapping."

The Tigers are in the joint with inhabitant energy Walters but open contest play Monday at 1 p.m. opposite Dyersburg State, which kick Chatt State twice and mislaid in additional innings in their Mar array at Dyersburg. There will be no looking past the first game, Zarzour said.

"We have some unprepared business with Dyersburg," he said.

Said McDonald: "They kick us twice, so it would be good to kick them. We should have won all three."

Contact Ron Bush at rbush@timesfreepress.com or 423-757-6291.