Lady Chiefs Weightlifting Team Places In West Fla. Meet

December 10, 2010

Several members of the Northview High School girls weightlifting team placed during their first meet of the season at West Florida High School.

The Northview girls competed in bench press and clean and jerk. West Florida High School placed first overall, followed by Northview in second and Washington High in third.

The following Northview girls placed in their weight class:

  • Georgia Geotter, sophomore -4th
  • Kasie Braun, freshman -3rd
  • Laneicia Gomez, senior -1st
  • Mallory Bell, senior -4th
  • Sarah Killam, senior -1st
  • Audra Martin, freshman -4th
  • Brittany Peebles, senior -1st
  • Naomi Cooler, senior -2nd
  • Te’Andreia Knight, sophomore -3rd

For more photos from the meet, click here.

Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com

Wins For NHS Girls, JV Boys Against Baker

December 10, 2010

The Northview Chiefs split games with the Baker Gators Thursday evening, with wins for the Chiefs’ varsity girls, and junior varsity girls.

Varsity Boys

Baker 47, Northview 45

The Northview varsity Chiefs and the Baker Gators were tied 45-45 headed into the final minutes of their game Thursday night in Bratt. But with a couple of free throws, the Gators pulled out a 47-45 victor.

Varsity Girls

Northview 43, Baker 37

JV Boys

Northview 29, Baker 23

JV Girls

Baker 30, Northview 13

Ernest Ward Basketball Player, 13, Airlifted After Game Injury

December 9, 2010

A 13-year old Ernest Ward Middle School girls  basketball player was airlifted to a Pensacola hospital after suffering an apparent head injury during a Thursday night game.

Brianna Parker was transported by LifeFlight to Sacred Heart Hospital. She was released from the hospital Thursday night after being treated for a concussion.

Pictured above: LifeFlight lands at the Walnut Hill Fire Station to transport an injured Ernest Ward Middle School girls basketball player. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Local Football Players Honored At Challenger Awards Banquet

December 7, 2010

The 42nd annual Fellowship of Christian Athletes Challenger Awards banquet Monday night honored high school football players for their spiritual leadership.

The players from across the area heard inspirational stories from four University of Alabama players — running back Trent Richardson, offensive lineman Barrett Jones, wide receiver Hardie Buck, and wide receiver Earl Alexander.

The players honored from the North Escambia area  were Austin Arrington from Northview, Zach Mitchell from Tate, Tanner Kirk from Escambia Academy, Jonathon Stallworth from Escambia County (Ala.), Brian Ross from Flomaton and Kevin Stanton from Jay.

Pictured: Northview’s Austin Arrington  and Jay’s Kevin Stanton were honored  during the 42nd annual Fellowship of Christian Athletes Challenger Awards banquet Monday night. Submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Pensacola’s Johanna Long Wins The Snowball Derby

December 6, 2010

Pensacola’s Johanna Long became the second, and the youngest, female to win the Snowball Derby Sunday in one of the wildest finishes short-track racing’s most prestigious event has seen.

Long, 18, shed tears of joy after hoisting the Tom Dawson trophy to celebrate a historic victory in the 43rd annual Snowball Derby.

Two North Escambia area residents placed in Sunday’s race. Brandon Carlson finished 33rd, while Eddie Mercer placed 37th.

Long  joins  Mercer (2005), Dickie Davis (1971, 1973) and Wayne Niedecken Sr. (1968) as hometown heroes to find Victory Lane at the Derby.

“It’s absolutely amazing,” Long, 18, said. “I can’t believe I did it. We worked so hard on this.”

Long shifted into another gear late when several of Sunday’s 16 cautions began to wave as the Derby neared its completion and drivers got antsy.

Fresh tires allowed her to pass Landon Cassill on Lap 316 for a lead she never relinquished, but not before Cassill went for a spin on the back straightaway and an ugly collision ensued behind him.

“She had new tires and was way faster than us,” said the 21-year-old Iowan, who finished fourth. “To run fourth here is a great accomplishment. I know I can win this.”

Five Flags’ asphalt is notorious for chewing up tires and spitting them out. This edition of the Derby was no different.

“(Cassill) understood,” said Long, who led 23 laps Sunday, including the final 13. “I had good tires and he didn’t.”

Several leaders lost their shot at racing immortality by foolishly believing their tires would hold up.

Chase Elliott, leading at the time, saw an unprecedented Snowflake 100-Derby weekend sweep fall by the wayside when Cassill spun him on Lap 298.

Before a green-white-checkered finish could be determined, the tower’s official ruling was that the drivers had to complete five total laps under green. Long sat outside the top five.

“I was nervous,” she said. “I was very concerned.”

She blew past Casey Smith and followed Cassill by then-leader Donnie Wilson on Lap 313.

Wilson was a terrific story Sunday. With Freddie Query, Long’s old crew chief, in his tower, Wilson made a valiant run playing the dark-horse role Sunday.

“Our track position was real good,” he said. “It was just our pit stops put us in a bad position. We still finished in the top five, so I’ll take it. I’m not gonna complain.”

Long finally won’t have to either. She was perfect on the green-white-checkered restart, pulling away from Wilson and never having to sweat in the final two laps.

Long stuck her fist outside the window into the cool air and pumped it as the checkered flag swayed in the wind.

A sometimes frustrating season was erased in a blink Sunday.

She came into the Derby win-less this year. Long gained invaluable experience while competing in seven NASCAR’s trucks series races, but her million-dollar smile paid the price for it.

Her confidence never wavered, though.

“I knew the team was working hard,” Long said. “They wanted to win just as much as I did. We finally did it.”

The home-schooled senior has faced many challenging tests this year. In her final exam, though, Long passed with flying colors.

“There’s been a lotta learning this year. It’s been tough,”said Donald Long, Johanna’s father and car owner. “We’ve made a few mistakes here and there, but we wanna race for a living. Hopefully, this gets us to that point.”

Video Highlights: Northview’s Playoff Game Against Trinity Christian

December 6, 2010

Here are video highlights by Keith Garrison from Northview’s Friday night playoff game on the road against Trinity Christian.

(The video is in three parts below.)

For game details and photos, click here for the NorthEscambia.com story.

Chase Elliot — Catches, Chases And Wins Snowflake 100

December 5, 2010

Watch closely. Chase Elliott is ready to amaze at any moment.

A teenage sensation in every sense of the word, Elliott has only been racing for seven of his 15 years.

But each time he climbs into one of his trademark No. 9 cars, the improbable seems likely for the son of NASCAR legend Bill Elliott.

It happened again in the Snowflake 100 on Saturday night at Five Flags Speedway.

Elliott started 31st out of 36 cars. When it was over, he wildly swung the checkered flag above his head as water, Red Bull and the crowd’s roar washed over him.

“It really shows how hard we worked for this,” said Elliott, who assumed the lead on Lap 86. “To have as many problems today … and to comeback, I’m just thankful.”

Elliott started near the tail end of the field after winning one of two last-chance qualifiers earlier Saturday. That was only necessary after he was disqualified following qualifying because officials ruled the nose of his car was too low.

None of it mattered. In fact, some of Elliott’s rivals thought the afternoon race might have helped him.

“He saw what was working,” said Bubba Pollard, who moved from third to second after Landon Cassill was disqualified in post-race inspection. “He’s a good little race-car driver, though.”

The good little race-car driver methodically made his way from the back of the pack while Augie Grill comfortably led for more than 70 laps (7 to 78).

Elliott began to lean on the throttle a little bit more at the midway point, as he cracked the top 10.

Then, he just began embarrassing drivers, especially coming out of Turn 4 where he shined.

He mowed down Pensacola’s Johanna Long, who finished a disappointing 13th after running in the top five early. He did away with today’s Snowball Derby polesitter Cale Gale.

Before you knew it, Elliott was up to fifth by Lap 70.

“I don’t believe it. The longer it went, the better he got,” papa Bill said.

The younger Elliott caught a burst of speed on Dwayne Buggay for third on Lap 78.

A lap later, Pollard past Grill for the lead, but the kid wasn’t far from making his final move.

“We had a good car; we just missed a little bit,” Pollard said. “I think I raced to hard at the beginning with Augie, but that’s how he races.”

After being the class of the field early, Grill fell back to sixth by the Snowflake’s end.

Long felt the sting of defeat, too, because the handling of her car continued to get worse as the race rolled on.

“It’s disappointing,” she said. “I expected so much.”

The expectations will culminate in today’s 43rd annual running of the Derby, America’s most prestigious short-track race.

It has been, unquestionably, a messy weekend out at Five Flags with some vicious crashes.

The Pro Late Models, though, proved their mettle by running green for the opening 34 laps before the first yellow came out. Dillon Oliver nudged Pensacola’s Tommy Rollins into the Turn 2 wall.

There was just one other yellow the rest of the way, as the race finished in a blazing time of right at an hour.

Nothing was as fast as Elliott, though.

“I thought at one point we were too loose,” he said.

Too loose? Now, that’s amazing.

Trinity Conquers Northview In State Semifinal Game (With Three Photo Galleries)

December 4, 2010

The Northview Chiefs’ state championship dreams were crushed Friday night by the Conquerors of Trinity Christian in Jacksonville, 49-14, in the Class 1A State Semifinals.

The finals stats were good for the Chiefs, controlling the ball three times more than Trinity, three times the running plays and twice as many passes. But five Conqueror drives in five minutes gave Trinity over three times the points on the board.

For more photos from the game, click here.
For a second photo gallery, click here.
For submitted fan photos, click here.

The Chiefs (11-2) took the lead with 5:47 to go in the first quarter on a 12-yard touchdown run from Dustin Yuhasz to cap an 80-yard, six minute drive. The point after kick was  blocked, and Northview held a 6-0 lead. But on the next sequence, Trinity answered with a 12-yard touchdown run of their own and a good kick. The Conquerors were on top 7-6 at the end of the first quarter.

In the second, the Trinity advantage increased to 14-6 with a 22-yard touchdown pass with 8:35 on the clock.

“We did what we needed to do in the first half,” Northview Head Coach Sid Wheatley said.”We controlled the ball about 18 of 24 minutes in the first half. Taking the lead with that first touchdown was big, and overall we controlled the ball well.”

The first few minutes of the third were also looking up for the Chiefs. Trinity scored on a 15 yard run on the opening drive of the second half. Down 21-6, a 2-yard touchdown scramble from Roderick Woods put it at 21-12. The Chiefs were successful on a two point conversion attempt, put Northview within reach at 21-14.

But then there was the last five minutes of the third. “In those next five minutes, we lost the game. We didn’t play well at all during those five minutes,” Wheatley said.

In those five minutes, the Conquerors conquered the Chiefs with successive TD’s — a 20-yard pass, a 23-yard pass and a 23-yard fumble return — to end the quarter at 49-14. The fourth quarter was scoreless.

It was 1979 when the Eagles of Ernest Ward High School last brought the only modern time Class A football championship back to the area. Ernest Ward would later merge with the Century Blackcats to create Northview. Friday night marked the first ever Semifinal appearance by a Northview team.

“I”m extremely proud of the season we had. They were the first team to go that far in the playoffs, and that says a lot,” Wheatley said. “We are going to work hard and  build on it next year.”

NorthEscambia.com photos on this page an in first listed gallery by Will Dickey, the Florida Times Union, click to enlarge. To purchase photo reprints from this article, visit jacksonville.com. Photos in the second gallery by Heather Leonard for NorthEscambia.com. Photos in fan photo gallery courtesy Megan Carroll and Wayne Holland for NorthEscambia.com.

Florida Hunters Could Be Required To Report Every Deer Harvested

December 2, 2010

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is considering new rule proposals requiring all hunters to tag harvested white-tailed deer and report the harvest to the FWC.

However, the commissioners directed staff to provide a menu of options regarding exempt hunters, showing how those hunters would report their harvest. Exempt hunters include individuals 65 and older and 16 and under.

Tagging and reporting game harvests is commonly done in many states, and FWC staff reviewed several other states’ harvest-reporting systems to see what might work well in Florida, according to a FWC news release The agency is seeking to craft a system where hunters would report their harvested deer, to better track where and how many deer are harvested in Florida.

FWC staff presented a draft proposal at five public meetings across the state and gathered input and feedback through an online poll.

The proposed harvest-reporting system would utilize a 24-hour, seven-days-a-week telephone and Internet system, and tags to attach to harvested deer.

Some of the information hunters would have to report includes their customer number, date of harvest, county, method of take, hunting with or without dogs, type of deer (antlered buck, button buck or doe) and number of antler points on bucks. All compiled statewide harvest data would be available to the public online and updated daily, but would not include hunters’ personal information.

“We want to make this system as friendly as possible for Florida’s hunters,” said Cory Morea, FWC biologist and deer management program coordinator. “We need the data to give Florida hunters what many of them have asked for – that is better management of the state’s deer herd, and at a more local level. This will give us one of the tools to enable us to do that.”

The new rules could be approved for final adoption at the February 2011 Commission meeting and would become effective July 1, 2011, and apply to the 2011-12 hunting season.

For more detailed information on the proposed harvest-reporting system, go to MyFWC.com/Deer.

Northview Splits Games With Ponce de Leon; Aggies Get Wins

November 30, 2010

The Northview Chiefs split games with Ponce de Leon Monday evening, while Tate picked up two wins

Northview  — Ponce de Leon

In boys action, Northview’s Chiefs defeated the Ponce de Leon Pirates 48-41, while the Lady Chiefs fell 66-23.

The JV and varsity boys will host Pensacola Christian Academy on December 2, while the varsity and JV boys and girls will host the Baker Gators on December 3.

Tate 58  Gulf Breeze 57

The Aggies picked up a 58-57  big win on the road Monday against Gulf Breeze, taking the lead with just 7.3 seconds on the clock.

Tate 60 Niceville 46 (Girls)

The Lady Aggies defeated Niceville 60 to 46. Tate improved to 4-1 with the win. Courtney Brown led the Lady Aggies with 19 points .

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