The Manchester Enterprise
A Heritage Newspaper
Weekly Publication
JV Dutch edged by East Jackson
Three score in double figures for Manchester in one-point setback
By Ed Patino, Staff Writer
PUBLISHED: March 1, 2007
There was not enough charity at the stripe for the Manchester junior varsity boys' basketball team.
Advertisement
A cold night at the free throw line came back to haunt the Flying Dutchmen in a 55-54 loss to the East Jackson Trojans last Friday at James C. Nelson Court.
Manchester hung with the Trojans throughout the game, but 33 percent shooting at the line prevented the Dutchmen from taking control of the game.
The Dutchmen went 4-for-12 at the charity stripe on the night.
"We had our chances to win," Manchester coach Corey Fether said.
Three players scored in double figures for Manchester. Trevor Hanewald led the way with 14 points and six rebounds, while Logan Ross had 10 points and eight rebounds. Clayton Every added 10 points and Sam Hatt finished with eight points for the Flying Dutchmen.
Dutch at Hanover-Horton
Almost everything went in for the Hanover-Horton Comets as they scored a 66-49 victory over the Manchester Flying Dutchmen in a league game Feb. 20.
Perennial Cascades power Hanover-Horton shot a blistering 72 percent from the floor on the night. The Comets combined their offensive prowess with an aggressive defense that shut down Manchester.
The loss spoiled a strong performance by Hanewald. The sophomore had 18 points, four rebounds and five steals to lead the Dutchmen. Hatt added nine points and five rebounds, while Josh Miller scored eight points and handed out seven assists. Every finished with seven points for Manchester.
The Dutchmen scored a 45-32 victory over the Addison Panthers on Feb. 15. Hunter Range had 10 points, six rebounds and five blocks to lead Manchester. Hanewald added eight points and nine rebounds, while Hatt, Miller and Ross each added six points for the Dutchmen.
Not all stories are guaranteed to appear
online. The Web edition contains a reasonable
sampling of the print edition stories.
For the most complete news coverage, we invite you to
subscribe
to the print edition of the paper.