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Bears win playoff game 64-62

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Gold-Burg won a close playoff game against Woodson on Thursday night, barely holding on to win 64-62 and taking clutch plays at the end.

The Gold-Burg Bears won their bi-district playoff game against Woodson on Thursday night and it came down to the wire.
The Bears held on to win 64-62 in a game where they led for most of it, but just could not get the Cowboys to leave them alone.
Gold-Burg came in as favorites despite both teams coming in with 6-4 records. The Bears’ schedule was considered slightly harder, they had won their district’s championship and were on a 6-1 run to end the season after a tough start.
Still, Woodson would prove it had several different weapons on offense which allowed it to hang with Gold-Burg and a never say die attitude that kept the team fighting until the very end.
The first play of the game saw the Cowboys try a trick play that went for a long touchdown run, but it was called back due to an alignment penalty. The Bears bounced back by forcing and recovering a fumble. Jayton Epperson, who recovered the fumble, a short-time later ran in an 18-yard touchdown to put Gold-Burg up 8-0 early.
Woodson bounced back with a play that would prove lethal throughout the night as its quarterback found Peyton Malcuit for a 34-yard touchdown pass in single coverage to tie the score at 8-8.
The Bears drove down the field and Epperson scored on a short run to go up 14-6. Gold-Burg tried to dial up the pressure to not allow the deep throw and it worked as it turned the Cowboys over on downs to get the ball back.
Unfortunately, the first offensive play saw the Bears fumble the ball and Woodson recovered it around midfield. Then the Cowboy’s Nico Romo burst threw for a 40-yard touchdown run. It put his team up 16-14.
The lead did not last long. On Gold-Burg’s first offensive play of the next drive, Jayton Epperson scrambled before dumping it down to Keelyn Case. Case took the pass up the sideline for a 45-yard touchdown catch. The Bears led 22-16.
Gold-Burg’s defense then repeated its tactic from its last drive to get the ball back. At the start of the second quarter, Levi Hellinger found Case for a 23-yard touchdown pass to put the Bears up 28-16.
It seemed like at this point Gold-Burg was about to pull away. Its defense seemed to have figured out Woodson’s offense, with the two touchdowns being two fluke big plays. The only way the Bears offense could be stopped is if they turned the ball over. The momentum seemed like it was all on Gold-Burg’s side.
Then Woodson hit Malcuit over the top again for a 39-yard touchdown and it was a one-score game again. The Cowboy’s trailed 28-24 and Gold-Burg needed to keep scoring.
The Bears answered with a good drive that took some time and ended with Epperson scoring on a 17-yard run to make it 34-24.
Woodson followed with a quick drive and Romo found room to burst open for a 27-yard touchdown to again cut the lead to one score as Gold-Burg led 34-32.
The Bears scored on their next drive when Epperson found Paul Jones for a 29-yard catch and run touchdown. Gold-Burg led 40-32.
The Bears’ defense got a stop on Woodson’s next drive when Jones recovered a fumble. With 38 seconds left before halftime, Gold-Burg tried to score once more since it was also receiving the ball to start the second half.
The Bears came up short and went into halftime up 40-32.
Gold-Burg started the second half with the ball and took advantage as it drove down to score with Caleb Epperson pounding his way in on a short run. The Bears led 48-32.
The Cowboys answered by driving down the field and scoring on a 12-yard pass play which again cut the lead down to one score 48-40.
Then a big traumatic sequence paused the action as Gold-Burg’s Caleb Epperson went down with a head injury that caused the ambulance on sight to stretcher him off the field. There was emotion from those on the team along with some family and friends that came onto the field. Afterwards the two teams came together to pray before getting back to the game.
Playing with renewed spirit, Gold-Burg scored shortly after as his brother Jayton scored on a seven-yard run to put the Bears up 56-40.
Despite that, Woodson just would not roll over. Again the Cowboys found Malcuit open for a 37-yard touchdown pass to cut the lead to 56-48.
Tensions boiled on the Bear’s sideline when the offense fumbled the ball away in Woodson’s red zone area. Gold-Burg’s defense stepped up and forced a turnover on downs, but then the Bear’s gave the ball right back when a high snap was again recovered by the Cowboys.
This time Woodson would take advantage. The first play of the fourth quarter saw the Cowboys find Malcuit for a short touchdown pass that tied the game at 56-56.
With Gold-Burg feeling down after several bad sequences on both sides of the ball, the Bears needed a big play to not just get back the lead but pick up everyone spirits about the game.
They got it when Zander Crawford aggressively scooped up the attempted onside kick and returned it 45 yards for a special teams touchdown. It put Gold-Burg back up 64-56 and gave the team its swagger back.
The Bears tried to make some coverage adjustments on defense and it paid off a short time later when Jayton Epperson intercepted a pass near their own goal line.
Gold-Burg failed to move the ball and backed up, the Bears made the rare call to punt the ball away.
It paid off because on the next play Gold-Burg’s defense forced a turnover as Eli Freeland recovered a fumble near midfield.
The Bears’ objective on its next drive was to run some clock since it seemed like everything was harder on offense, with their top playmakers fatigued and beat up from playing all game.
Gold-Burg ran more than five minutes off the clock before disappointingly turning the ball over on downs at Woodson’s 20-yard line with 2:22 left in the game.
It seemed like the Bears had the Cowboys figured out now that it was putting extra people in coverage on Malcuit. Still, the Cowboys found a way as they found Hagen Miller on a deep 50-yard touchdown pass with 1:23 left in the game.
Woodson had not missed an extra point all game and needed to make it to tie the score. Instead, Gold-Burg came up with another big special teams play as several players got back to block the extra point attempt.
The Bears still led 64-62.
The game was not over, Gold-Burg had to recover the onside kick and get at least one first down since Woodson had all three of its timeouts left.
The Bears recovered the onside kick. Still Gold-Burg did not have much offensive success since the traumatic injury in the third quarter and were struggling again to execute.
Facing a fourth down with seven yards to go, the Bears gave the ball to Jones who fought his way for eight yards. The first down iced the game and Gold-Burg was able to fall on the ball to run out the clock to secure the 64-62 win.

To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekend edition of the Bowie News. For more pictures from the game, click here https://www.dotphoto.com/go.asp?l=bnews1&AID=6870518&T=1

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Tucker big in life as he was tall

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Temple Tucker graduated Bowie in 1954 and left indeniable impression on everyone encountered on and off the hardwood. (Courtesy photo)

The Bowie community lost one of its most well-known graduates with the passing of Temple Tucker on Dec. 7.
Tucker moved to Bowie in junior high after first living in Mercedes and Corpus Christi. He cut an impressive first impression for his classmates as even back then he was on his way to standing 6 feet 10 inches.
“He was tall,” echoed classmates Gail White and Ben Hill.
At first his height seemed to hinder him more than help on the basketball court as he is described as tripping over himself.
“He couldn’t chew gum and walk down the street at the same time,” White said.
It took good tutoring, first from principal Paul Tover and then Coach Raymond Mattingly to turn Tucker into one of the best basketball players in the state.
Tucker graduated in 1954 and has the distinction of being possibly the most accomplished athlete in program history, no matter the sport. He was a part of four straight state championship basketball teams, where he featured as the team’s center down low back when post play ruled the sport. He was named to the all-state team his last three years.
Playing in an era where more than 10 of his teammates went on to play college basketball and coached by Raymond Mattingly, who was inducted into the Texas High School Basketball Hall of Fame and was a member of the Texas High School Coaches Association Hall of Honor, Tucker was far from a one-man show.
His last two seasons saw Bowie go on a 69 game winning streak, only snapped the year after Tucker and his teammates graduated.
He then went to Rice University and played for the Owls. Freshman were not allowed to play back then so when he starred as a sophomore he averaged 22.1 points and 12.7 rebounds and was a third team All-American selection and a second team all-southwest conference selection.
As a junior, he averaged 15.1 points and 10.5 rebounds while earning second team All-SWC again. His senior year he averaged 13.5 points and 8.8 rebounds while being picked as Rice’s most valuable player.
He was later inducted into the Texas High School Basketball Hall of Honor, the Rice University Athletics Hall of Fame and the Bowie High School Hall of Honor.
Tucker then was drafted in the fourth round of the NBA draft by the Philadelphia Warriors. Instead of pursuing professional sports, which were much less lucrative than they are now, he decided to use his bachelor of arts degree in economics to work for Northwestern National Life Insurances as a financial advisor. He lived in the Houston area and was living in Cypress with his wife of 41 years, Anita, when he passed. He was previously married to Doris Neville.
“He was my gentle my giant,” Anita said. “Everyone knew that is what I called him.”
Described as a humble person, many of his family and friends only learned later from other people and from discovering packed up trophies in boxes the extent of Tucker’s athletic achievements.
He had five children: Kevin, Brian, Carol, Rick and Marva. His oldest, Kevin, described Tucker as the stereotypical Christian-centered father growing up.
“If you had to define a father, he was a great traditional father that grew up in a Christian household,” Kevin said. “Taught us about the great outdoors, sports and how to live life.”
Kevin said the seeds for his faith were planted throughout his life by his dad. When he eventually came to embrace it while in college, his father was there ready to forgive him.
A big part of Tucker’s life was being apart of and then spending time as the president of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes Greater Houston chapter. His father was a minister and Tucker’s faith was a big part of his life even as a teenager says his classmates.
“I never heard anyone say a derogatory word about Temple Tucker,” 1954 senior class president Gail White said. “He didn’t run around with the guys, but he was always with us when we were in a big group.”
“He was the best of us,” Ben Hill said.
The only time Hill, his teammate and the last surviving starting five member from the 1954 team, said he heard Tucker swear was a funny story.
Several of the key basketball players failed to hide from Coach Mattingly in the gym during track practice and were forced to run the 4×440 yard relay against the varsity track team.
“Temple was running the first leg and I was running the second,” Hill said. “The race started and old Temple come around the first curve. It’s a gravel track and he has on tennis shoes. He dropped the baton and when he turned around to get it he fell down in the gravel. Of course I was just on the ground laughing. He got up and got his baton and he wanted me to keep running. He said run, you SOB, run.”
It was one of several stories the two shared in their last phone call earlier this year.

To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekend edition of the Bowie News.

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Montague County 11-man football all-district lists released

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Bowie running back Justin Clark was named second team all-district.

Bowie
First team
Rayder Mann, quarterback; Tyler Richey, wide receiver; Hunter Fluitt, offensive lineman; Noah Metzler, defensive lineman; Hunter Rodriguez, free safety
Second team
Justin Clark, running back; Preacher Chambers, defensive lineman; Griffin Richey, linebacker; Moh Azouak, cornerback
Honorable mention
Lane Whitfield, linebacker; Bradley Horton, strong safety; Hayden Rodriguez, offensive lineman; Jorge De Leon, defensive lineman; Zac Harris, tight end; Austin Cheney, outside linebacker; Jett Black, offensive lineman; Braden Rhyne, wide receiver; Boston Farris, cornerback
Academic all-district
Moh Azouk, Austin Cheney, Justin Clark, Jorge De Leon, Boston Farris, Hunter Fluitt, Simion Givens, Zac Harris, Hayden Rodriguez, Robert Stice, Rayder Mann, Hunter Rodriguez, Bradley Horton, Griffin Richey, Tyler Richey

Nocona
First team
Matthew Johnson, offensive lineman; Jake Pribble, defensive lineman; Kasch Johnson, defensive lineman
Second team
Jax Fuller, running back; McCrae Crossen, linebacker
Honorable mention
Jayce Lehde, defensive back; Matthew Johnson, defensive lineman; Walker Murphey, linebacker

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Bowie soccer club kicks off with first games

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The Lady Rabbits club team came back from 2-0 to beat Burkburnett 4-2 on Tuesday. (Courtesy photo)

The Bowie soccer club played its first games of the season on Tuesday night to make history.
The Lady Rabbits beat Burkburnett 4-2 while the Jackrabbits lost against Wichita Falls Memorial 2-0.

Girls
The Bowie girls found themselves behind 2-0 early on against the Lady Bulldogs. The first goal of the season was scored by midfielder Heidi Siebert in the 23rd minute, which cut the lead to 2-1.
Right before halftime, midfielder Willow Siebert scored from 25 yards out to send the Lady Rabbits into the second half with momentum and the score tied at 2-2.
Early in the second half, striker Grayson Mares, who is in junior high, put Bowie in front with a goal in the 49th minute which was assisted from Willow Siebert.
The Lady Rabbits defense was able to hold for the rest of the second half. Late in the match, midfielder Adamari Alonso clinched the win by converting on a penalty kick to make the final score 4-2.
Willow Siebert was named player of the match, not just for her goal and assist, but her defending as well.
The defense played great after the initial two scores. Goalkeeper Yaquelyn “Yaq Yaq” Alvarez had three saves in the match. The defense allowed only two shots in the second half.
Coach Chad Word liked what he saw from his team considering they got the win against a 4A program.

Boys
The Jackrabbits fell behind early as WF Memorial converted on a penalty kick in the 13th minute. The Mavericks added one more goal early in the second half. Despite that, the defense challenged the Mavericks thanks to goalkeeper Zac Ivy, centerback Jerry Wymore and midfielders Sebastian Martinez and Corban Word. Word and Wymore also served as captains.
While Bowie lost 2-0, it was good showing playing against a 5A program and it being the team’s first ever game. Coach Chad Word saw some good things, but knows there are still things to work on.

To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekend edition of the Bowie News.

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