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Balanced attack lifts HHS to win
JOHN MIDDLETON|Daily Enterprise
Harlan's Dylan McNiel put up a shot over Barbourville's Kevin Engle during a 55-48 victory over the visiting Tigers on Monday. McNiel finished with seven points in the win.
JOHN MIDDLETON|Daily Enterprise Harlan's Dylan McNiel put up a shot over Barbourville's Kevin Engle during a 55-48 victory over the visiting Tigers on Monday. McNiel finished with seven points in the win.
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JOHN MIDDLETON

Sports Editor

If you are going to rely on the advice of a basketball coach, John Wooden isn’t a bad place to start. A quote from the legendary UCLA coach appears to have had an impact on David Parks’ Harlan squad. The Green Dragons’ unselfish play led to the first winning streak of the season as they knocked off visiting Barbourville 55-48 on Monday.

“We are just trying to win. I don’t care who scores. There is a very good quote by John Wooden that says ‘It’s amazing what can be accomplished when nobody cares who gets the credit.’ That’s the kind of approach that I have taken,” Parks said. “I want to get this program turned around and I want to win. That’s all I am trying to do.”

All 10 Green Dragons that entered Monday’s contest reached the scoring column, as that new found unselfishness was on full display. Freshman Drew Parks was the only Dragon in double-figures with 11 points.

After Barbourville’s Devon Mills opened the scoring with a putback off of an offensive rebound, Harlan went on a 10-2 run to take the early advantage. Parks capped the surge with a pair of 3-pointers. However, the rest of the first quarter belonged to Barbourville. The Tigers closed the period on an 11-0 run to go up 15-10. Mills carried Barbourville with 12 points in the opening period, and finished with 26 points to lead all scorers.

Mills opened the second quarter with a trey and a jumper to make it 22-13, but the Dragons began to chip away from that point. A Dylan McNiel 3-pointer started a rally that saw Harlan close the half on a 12-4 run to reduce the deficit to 26-25 at the break. Senior David Allen led the Dragons with six points in the period, including an offensive rebound putback just before the buzzer.

Harlan took the lead in an impressive third quarter. The Green Dragons led by as many as eight points, before taking a 38-33 lead into the fourth quarter. The biggest difference came on the glass, where Harlan outrebounded the Tigers 13-7. Senior Dakota Morris had three points and four rebounds in the period.

The Dragons threatened to put the game out of reach early in the final period as back-to-baskets from Nathan Young and Isaiah Johnson pushed the lead to 42-33. However, Barbourville wouldn’t go away quietly and responded with an 8-3 run that saw the lead shrink to four with 3:09 remaining. Harlan stiffened up defensively from that point, holding the Tigers scoreless for nearly two minutes. The Green Dragons missed several opportunities to extend the lead during that stretch, hitting just four-of-10 free throws to make it 49-41.

Alexander Phipps drained a trey from the right corner to make it 49-44 with 1:35 left, but Johnson answered with a pair of free throws on the ensuing possession. Parks followed with another pair from the line with 1:17 left in the contest, and the Dragons were never threatened from that point.

“This is the signature win that we really needed. I think it will really help our program. We still did a lot of things to make it interesting, but we played hard. It was a heck of a win for us,” Parks said. “We came up with a big play when we needed to come up to it.”

Harlan’s Caleb Hogue thrived in his new role at point guard. The freshman provided a reliable ball-handling option and finished with seven points.

“I thought Caleb Hogue played huge. He gets any loose ball, and goes to the foul line and hits two free throws with his leg killing him,” Parks said. “It is very unusual when you have a freshman as a leader, and Caleb has turned into that.”

Harlan (6-13) returns to action Thursday at J. Frank White (Tenn.), while Barbourville (12-8) will travel to South Laurel on Saturday.

—-

Harlan fell 52-45 to Barbourville in the junior varsity contest.

Eighth-graders Cameron Carmical and Noah Busroe had 17 points and 12 points respectively to pace the Green Dragons. Austin Wilson, Andrew Varney and Tanner Parks each contributed four points. Tanner Morris recorded three points, and Andrew Mills added one point.

—-

In previously unreported action, the Green Dragons cruised to a 90-21 victory at Riverside Christian on Saturday.

Harlan relied on a balanced offensive attack, placing five scorers in double-digits. McNiel, Johnson and Aaron Simpson led the Dragons with 12 points each.

The Dragons were never challenged by Riverside, leading 28-11 after one quarter and 55-17 at the half.

—-

Harlan (55) – Drew Parks 11, Caleb Hogue 7, Nathan Young 4, Isaiah Johnson 6, Aaron Simpson 3, Leighton Piper 1, Manny Davis 4, Dylan McNiel 7, David Allen 7, Dakota Morris 5.

Barbourville (48) – Tanner Moore 0, Alexander Phipps 8, Zack Strong 6, Devon Mills 26, Jason Mills 4, Jacob Ruse 2, Kevin Engle 0, Austin Eldridge 2, Brentley Perry 0.

—-

Harlan (90) – Drew Parks 6, Caleb Hogue 0, Nathan Young 10, Manny Davis 10, Aaron Simpson 12, Leighton Piper 6, Isaiah Johnson 12, Dylan McNiel 12, David Allen 5, Ethan Morton 4, Andrew Saylor 2, Tanner Parks 3, Andrew Varney 8.

Riverside Christian (21)

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News
Black Bears fall in state AAU quarterfinals
by John Middleton
Sports Editor
Jun 17, 2013 | 1916 views | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Harlan County won’t enter the 2014 basketball season with the expectations that were placed on the team in past seasons. However, if the their performance in the Kentucky AAU Tournament at the Kentucky Basketball Academy last weekend is any indication, the Black Bears will likely be in the hunt for a regional championship again next year.

“We learned that even though we lost a lot of players that we have a very good basketball team. We really like this group. They play hard and together,” said Harlan County assistant coach Michael Jones. “We have a lot of things to work on like everybody else, but I like our chances.”

Harlan County’s tournament path began in a difficult group. The Bears fell to state contender Henry Clay in the first game of group play, before dropping a 56-54 decision against 14th Region power Perry Central. The Black Bears then cruised to a 76-45 victory over Cordia.

“We finally put things together and played well against Cordia. It was tough coming off of back-to-back losses, but the kids bounced back,” Jones said. “Cordia ended up making it to the final four, so it was a big win for our kids. That gave them a lot of momentum going into tournament play.”

Harlan County then turned in a dominant 91-44 victory over East Jessamine in the first round of tournament play. The Jaguars went 23-8 last season, but were no match for the Black Bears.

“East Jessamine has a solid team. The score probably doesn’t indicate that, but they do. Our kids played really well. Beating a team like that was a good way to open the tournament,” Jones said.

Harlan County picked up its biggest win of the summer in the round of 16, knocking off 15th Region champion Johnson Central 72-65.

“Johnson Central has a really good team with everybody back. That was the first game they have lost all summer,” said Jones. “They beat us by 13 in the second game of the summer, so that just showed how far the kids have come and what type of kids we have. That game had a regional tournament atmosphere. We beat a really good team that will be in the top 10 in the state when the preseason rankings come out.”

Tyler Miller shined in the victory over Johnson Central. The junior forward finished with 18 points and 16 rebounds against the Golden Eagles and Shane Hall, who is rated as the 19th best forward in the 2014 class by scout.com.

“Miller was excited to play in that game. He really went after it, and played as hard as he could possibly play,” Jones said. “When he gives that type of effort it makes everybody on the team better. It was great to see him play well against Shane Hall.”

The Bears’ run came to an end in the quarterfinals in an 81-73 loss to Lexington Christian Academy.

Harlan County received consistent play from the forward trio of Miller, Zach Caldwell and Fred Massey throughout the event. That group is expected to lead the team next season.

“All three of them had real solid tournaments. Caldwell was really consistent. He shot the ball well from the 3-point line and did a good job competing against Shane Hall and (Perry Central’s) Justin Johnson. Fred gives you all he’s got all the time. He does the little things that don’t always show up in the box score.”

Jones said juniors Cody Bumgardner and Trey Sanders were also solid in the backcourt.

“Trey Sanders had a heck of a weekend down there, and then the leadership of Cody Bumgardner really makes this team go. It was a solid team effort,” Jones said.

Harlan County continued to get strong play from its freshman class, including 32 points from Cameron Carmical in three elimination games.

“Cameron is so intelligent about the game of basketball. He makes us better when he is out on the floor,” Jones said. “Treyce Spurlock played a heck of a game against Johnson Central. Those two freshmen are going to make this team better.”

Harlan County will likely close the summer schedule today at home against Middlesboro.

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Middle school sports may fall under regulations
Jun 17, 2013 | 160 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

LEXINGTON (AP) — Kentucky lawmakers are reviewing a proposal that would place middle school athletics under the purview of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association, with the regulations going into effect for the 2014-15 school year.

If approved, the measure would mark the first time middle schools fell under statewide oversight.

The state board of education has already signed on to the idea. KHSAA Commissioner Julian Tackett told the Lexington Herald-Leader the lack of statewide oversight over middle school athletics has led to problems that include some schools playing more games during a season than is considered safe and parents holding students back a year simply for athletic reasons.

The regulation was filed with the Legislative Research Commission on Friday. After a month long public comment period and a public hearing, the General Assembly’s Administrative Regulation Review Subcommittee and the Interim Joint Committee on Education will give the regulation a final review.

Tackett said the agency would deal with middle schools using a different model than it uses for high schools. Instead of governing middle schools, the KHSAA would provide staff and coordination for a 21-member regionally balanced committee composed mostly of educators who have expertise in middle school athletics.

The regulation, approved by the state board of education in April, sets some fundamental guidelines, but many specific rules would be decided by the middle school committee and local school districts.

“We’re governing high school sports, we are overseeing this middle school project … I hope this leads to the development of a strong middle school program,” Tackett said.

Because middle school athletes have needs that are different from high school athletes, the yet-to-be-named committee members “can’t just Xerox the high school rules,” Tackett said.

High school sports in the state are governed by the bylaws of the KHSAA, but there is no similar organization for middle school athletics, for which local school boards make their own rules. Also, private citizens have established nonprofit organizations to establish playoffs and championships in some areas of the state for middle school sports such as football and wrestling.

In 1993, a task force recommended that the KHSAA expand its scope to include middle school athletics, but that was never done because of finances and lack of manpower. Tackett said the KHSAA can now handle the oversight of health and safety rules.

Under the proposals, beginning with the 2014-15 school year, students would not be able to compete in middle school during a year in which they are repeating a grade for any reason, under the regulation. Students could compete in later middle school years, Tackett said.

A similar rule has been in place for high school students for years, Tackett said.

Middle school students wouldn’t be able to play more games than high school students are allowed to play. Under Kentucky law, seventh- and eighth-grade students may play at the high school level in most sports except soccer, wrestling and football. That wouldn’t change under the new regulation.

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Sports
Black Bears fall in state AAU quarterfinals
by John Middleton
Sports Editor
Jun 17, 2013 | 1916 views | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Harlan County won’t enter the 2014 basketball season with the expectations that were placed on the team in past seasons. However, if the their performance in the Kentucky AAU Tournament at the Kentucky Basketball Academy last weekend is any indication, the Black Bears will likely be in the hunt for a regional championship again next year.

“We learned that even though we lost a lot of players that we have a very good basketball team. We really like this group. They play hard and together,” said Harlan County assistant coach Michael Jones. “We have a lot of things to work on like everybody else, but I like our chances.”

Harlan County’s tournament path began in a difficult group. The Bears fell to state contender Henry Clay in the first game of group play, before dropping a 56-54 decision against 14th Region power Perry Central. The Black Bears then cruised to a 76-45 victory over Cordia.

“We finally put things together and played well against Cordia. It was tough coming off of back-to-back losses, but the kids bounced back,” Jones said. “Cordia ended up making it to the final four, so it was a big win for our kids. That gave them a lot of momentum going into tournament play.”

Harlan County then turned in a dominant 91-44 victory over East Jessamine in the first round of tournament play. The Jaguars went 23-8 last season, but were no match for the Black Bears.

“East Jessamine has a solid team. The score probably doesn’t indicate that, but they do. Our kids played really well. Beating a team like that was a good way to open the tournament,” Jones said.

Harlan County picked up its biggest win of the summer in the round of 16, knocking off 15th Region champion Johnson Central 72-65.

“Johnson Central has a really good team with everybody back. That was the first game they have lost all summer,” said Jones. “They beat us by 13 in the second game of the summer, so that just showed how far the kids have come and what type of kids we have. That game had a regional tournament atmosphere. We beat a really good team that will be in the top 10 in the state when the preseason rankings come out.”

Tyler Miller shined in the victory over Johnson Central. The junior forward finished with 18 points and 16 rebounds against the Golden Eagles and Shane Hall, who is rated as the 19th best forward in the 2014 class by scout.com.

“Miller was excited to play in that game. He really went after it, and played as hard as he could possibly play,” Jones said. “When he gives that type of effort it makes everybody on the team better. It was great to see him play well against Shane Hall.”

The Bears’ run came to an end in the quarterfinals in an 81-73 loss to Lexington Christian Academy.

Harlan County received consistent play from the forward trio of Miller, Zach Caldwell and Fred Massey throughout the event. That group is expected to lead the team next season.

“All three of them had real solid tournaments. Caldwell was really consistent. He shot the ball well from the 3-point line and did a good job competing against Shane Hall and (Perry Central’s) Justin Johnson. Fred gives you all he’s got all the time. He does the little things that don’t always show up in the box score.”

Jones said juniors Cody Bumgardner and Trey Sanders were also solid in the backcourt.

“Trey Sanders had a heck of a weekend down there, and then the leadership of Cody Bumgardner really makes this team go. It was a solid team effort,” Jones said.

Harlan County continued to get strong play from its freshman class, including 32 points from Cameron Carmical in three elimination games.

“Cameron is so intelligent about the game of basketball. He makes us better when he is out on the floor,” Jones said. “Treyce Spurlock played a heck of a game against Johnson Central. Those two freshmen are going to make this team better.”

Harlan County will likely close the summer schedule today at home against Middlesboro.

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Middle school sports may fall under regulations
Jun 17, 2013 | 160 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

LEXINGTON (AP) — Kentucky lawmakers are reviewing a proposal that would place middle school athletics under the purview of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association, with the regulations going into effect for the 2014-15 school year.

If approved, the measure would mark the first time middle schools fell under statewide oversight.

The state board of education has already signed on to the idea. KHSAA Commissioner Julian Tackett told the Lexington Herald-Leader the lack of statewide oversight over middle school athletics has led to problems that include some schools playing more games during a season than is considered safe and parents holding students back a year simply for athletic reasons.

The regulation was filed with the Legislative Research Commission on Friday. After a month long public comment period and a public hearing, the General Assembly’s Administrative Regulation Review Subcommittee and the Interim Joint Committee on Education will give the regulation a final review.

Tackett said the agency would deal with middle schools using a different model than it uses for high schools. Instead of governing middle schools, the KHSAA would provide staff and coordination for a 21-member regionally balanced committee composed mostly of educators who have expertise in middle school athletics.

The regulation, approved by the state board of education in April, sets some fundamental guidelines, but many specific rules would be decided by the middle school committee and local school districts.

“We’re governing high school sports, we are overseeing this middle school project … I hope this leads to the development of a strong middle school program,” Tackett said.

Because middle school athletes have needs that are different from high school athletes, the yet-to-be-named committee members “can’t just Xerox the high school rules,” Tackett said.

High school sports in the state are governed by the bylaws of the KHSAA, but there is no similar organization for middle school athletics, for which local school boards make their own rules. Also, private citizens have established nonprofit organizations to establish playoffs and championships in some areas of the state for middle school sports such as football and wrestling.

In 1993, a task force recommended that the KHSAA expand its scope to include middle school athletics, but that was never done because of finances and lack of manpower. Tackett said the KHSAA can now handle the oversight of health and safety rules.

Under the proposals, beginning with the 2014-15 school year, students would not be able to compete in middle school during a year in which they are repeating a grade for any reason, under the regulation. Students could compete in later middle school years, Tackett said.

A similar rule has been in place for high school students for years, Tackett said.

Middle school students wouldn’t be able to play more games than high school students are allowed to play. Under Kentucky law, seventh- and eighth-grade students may play at the high school level in most sports except soccer, wrestling and football. That wouldn’t change under the new regulation.

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Opinion
Black Bears fall in state AAU quarterfinals
by John Middleton
Sports Editor
Jun 17, 2013 | 1916 views | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Harlan County won’t enter the 2014 basketball season with the expectations that were placed on the team in past seasons. However, if the their performance in the Kentucky AAU Tournament at the Kentucky Basketball Academy last weekend is any indication, the Black Bears will likely be in the hunt for a regional championship again next year.

“We learned that even though we lost a lot of players that we have a very good basketball team. We really like this group. They play hard and together,” said Harlan County assistant coach Michael Jones. “We have a lot of things to work on like everybody else, but I like our chances.”

Harlan County’s tournament path began in a difficult group. The Bears fell to state contender Henry Clay in the first game of group play, before dropping a 56-54 decision against 14th Region power Perry Central. The Black Bears then cruised to a 76-45 victory over Cordia.

“We finally put things together and played well against Cordia. It was tough coming off of back-to-back losses, but the kids bounced back,” Jones said. “Cordia ended up making it to the final four, so it was a big win for our kids. That gave them a lot of momentum going into tournament play.”

Harlan County then turned in a dominant 91-44 victory over East Jessamine in the first round of tournament play. The Jaguars went 23-8 last season, but were no match for the Black Bears.

“East Jessamine has a solid team. The score probably doesn’t indicate that, but they do. Our kids played really well. Beating a team like that was a good way to open the tournament,” Jones said.

Harlan County picked up its biggest win of the summer in the round of 16, knocking off 15th Region champion Johnson Central 72-65.

“Johnson Central has a really good team with everybody back. That was the first game they have lost all summer,” said Jones. “They beat us by 13 in the second game of the summer, so that just showed how far the kids have come and what type of kids we have. That game had a regional tournament atmosphere. We beat a really good team that will be in the top 10 in the state when the preseason rankings come out.”

Tyler Miller shined in the victory over Johnson Central. The junior forward finished with 18 points and 16 rebounds against the Golden Eagles and Shane Hall, who is rated as the 19th best forward in the 2014 class by scout.com.

“Miller was excited to play in that game. He really went after it, and played as hard as he could possibly play,” Jones said. “When he gives that type of effort it makes everybody on the team better. It was great to see him play well against Shane Hall.”

The Bears’ run came to an end in the quarterfinals in an 81-73 loss to Lexington Christian Academy.

Harlan County received consistent play from the forward trio of Miller, Zach Caldwell and Fred Massey throughout the event. That group is expected to lead the team next season.

“All three of them had real solid tournaments. Caldwell was really consistent. He shot the ball well from the 3-point line and did a good job competing against Shane Hall and (Perry Central’s) Justin Johnson. Fred gives you all he’s got all the time. He does the little things that don’t always show up in the box score.”

Jones said juniors Cody Bumgardner and Trey Sanders were also solid in the backcourt.

“Trey Sanders had a heck of a weekend down there, and then the leadership of Cody Bumgardner really makes this team go. It was a solid team effort,” Jones said.

Harlan County continued to get strong play from its freshman class, including 32 points from Cameron Carmical in three elimination games.

“Cameron is so intelligent about the game of basketball. He makes us better when he is out on the floor,” Jones said. “Treyce Spurlock played a heck of a game against Johnson Central. Those two freshmen are going to make this team better.”

Harlan County will likely close the summer schedule today at home against Middlesboro.

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Middle school sports may fall under regulations
Jun 17, 2013 | 160 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

LEXINGTON (AP) — Kentucky lawmakers are reviewing a proposal that would place middle school athletics under the purview of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association, with the regulations going into effect for the 2014-15 school year.

If approved, the measure would mark the first time middle schools fell under statewide oversight.

The state board of education has already signed on to the idea. KHSAA Commissioner Julian Tackett told the Lexington Herald-Leader the lack of statewide oversight over middle school athletics has led to problems that include some schools playing more games during a season than is considered safe and parents holding students back a year simply for athletic reasons.

The regulation was filed with the Legislative Research Commission on Friday. After a month long public comment period and a public hearing, the General Assembly’s Administrative Regulation Review Subcommittee and the Interim Joint Committee on Education will give the regulation a final review.

Tackett said the agency would deal with middle schools using a different model than it uses for high schools. Instead of governing middle schools, the KHSAA would provide staff and coordination for a 21-member regionally balanced committee composed mostly of educators who have expertise in middle school athletics.

The regulation, approved by the state board of education in April, sets some fundamental guidelines, but many specific rules would be decided by the middle school committee and local school districts.

“We’re governing high school sports, we are overseeing this middle school project … I hope this leads to the development of a strong middle school program,” Tackett said.

Because middle school athletes have needs that are different from high school athletes, the yet-to-be-named committee members “can’t just Xerox the high school rules,” Tackett said.

High school sports in the state are governed by the bylaws of the KHSAA, but there is no similar organization for middle school athletics, for which local school boards make their own rules. Also, private citizens have established nonprofit organizations to establish playoffs and championships in some areas of the state for middle school sports such as football and wrestling.

In 1993, a task force recommended that the KHSAA expand its scope to include middle school athletics, but that was never done because of finances and lack of manpower. Tackett said the KHSAA can now handle the oversight of health and safety rules.

Under the proposals, beginning with the 2014-15 school year, students would not be able to compete in middle school during a year in which they are repeating a grade for any reason, under the regulation. Students could compete in later middle school years, Tackett said.

A similar rule has been in place for high school students for years, Tackett said.

Middle school students wouldn’t be able to play more games than high school students are allowed to play. Under Kentucky law, seventh- and eighth-grade students may play at the high school level in most sports except soccer, wrestling and football. That wouldn’t change under the new regulation.

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Local Features
Black Bears fall in state AAU quarterfinals
by John Middleton
Sports Editor
Jun 17, 2013 | 1916 views | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Harlan County won’t enter the 2014 basketball season with the expectations that were placed on the team in past seasons. However, if the their performance in the Kentucky AAU Tournament at the Kentucky Basketball Academy last weekend is any indication, the Black Bears will likely be in the hunt for a regional championship again next year.

“We learned that even though we lost a lot of players that we have a very good basketball team. We really like this group. They play hard and together,” said Harlan County assistant coach Michael Jones. “We have a lot of things to work on like everybody else, but I like our chances.”

Harlan County’s tournament path began in a difficult group. The Bears fell to state contender Henry Clay in the first game of group play, before dropping a 56-54 decision against 14th Region power Perry Central. The Black Bears then cruised to a 76-45 victory over Cordia.

“We finally put things together and played well against Cordia. It was tough coming off of back-to-back losses, but the kids bounced back,” Jones said. “Cordia ended up making it to the final four, so it was a big win for our kids. That gave them a lot of momentum going into tournament play.”

Harlan County then turned in a dominant 91-44 victory over East Jessamine in the first round of tournament play. The Jaguars went 23-8 last season, but were no match for the Black Bears.

“East Jessamine has a solid team. The score probably doesn’t indicate that, but they do. Our kids played really well. Beating a team like that was a good way to open the tournament,” Jones said.

Harlan County picked up its biggest win of the summer in the round of 16, knocking off 15th Region champion Johnson Central 72-65.

“Johnson Central has a really good team with everybody back. That was the first game they have lost all summer,” said Jones. “They beat us by 13 in the second game of the summer, so that just showed how far the kids have come and what type of kids we have. That game had a regional tournament atmosphere. We beat a really good team that will be in the top 10 in the state when the preseason rankings come out.”

Tyler Miller shined in the victory over Johnson Central. The junior forward finished with 18 points and 16 rebounds against the Golden Eagles and Shane Hall, who is rated as the 19th best forward in the 2014 class by scout.com.

“Miller was excited to play in that game. He really went after it, and played as hard as he could possibly play,” Jones said. “When he gives that type of effort it makes everybody on the team better. It was great to see him play well against Shane Hall.”

The Bears’ run came to an end in the quarterfinals in an 81-73 loss to Lexington Christian Academy.

Harlan County received consistent play from the forward trio of Miller, Zach Caldwell and Fred Massey throughout the event. That group is expected to lead the team next season.

“All three of them had real solid tournaments. Caldwell was really consistent. He shot the ball well from the 3-point line and did a good job competing against Shane Hall and (Perry Central’s) Justin Johnson. Fred gives you all he’s got all the time. He does the little things that don’t always show up in the box score.”

Jones said juniors Cody Bumgardner and Trey Sanders were also solid in the backcourt.

“Trey Sanders had a heck of a weekend down there, and then the leadership of Cody Bumgardner really makes this team go. It was a solid team effort,” Jones said.

Harlan County continued to get strong play from its freshman class, including 32 points from Cameron Carmical in three elimination games.

“Cameron is so intelligent about the game of basketball. He makes us better when he is out on the floor,” Jones said. “Treyce Spurlock played a heck of a game against Johnson Central. Those two freshmen are going to make this team better.”

Harlan County will likely close the summer schedule today at home against Middlesboro.

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Middle school sports may fall under regulations
Jun 17, 2013 | 160 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

LEXINGTON (AP) — Kentucky lawmakers are reviewing a proposal that would place middle school athletics under the purview of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association, with the regulations going into effect for the 2014-15 school year.

If approved, the measure would mark the first time middle schools fell under statewide oversight.

The state board of education has already signed on to the idea. KHSAA Commissioner Julian Tackett told the Lexington Herald-Leader the lack of statewide oversight over middle school athletics has led to problems that include some schools playing more games during a season than is considered safe and parents holding students back a year simply for athletic reasons.

The regulation was filed with the Legislative Research Commission on Friday. After a month long public comment period and a public hearing, the General Assembly’s Administrative Regulation Review Subcommittee and the Interim Joint Committee on Education will give the regulation a final review.

Tackett said the agency would deal with middle schools using a different model than it uses for high schools. Instead of governing middle schools, the KHSAA would provide staff and coordination for a 21-member regionally balanced committee composed mostly of educators who have expertise in middle school athletics.

The regulation, approved by the state board of education in April, sets some fundamental guidelines, but many specific rules would be decided by the middle school committee and local school districts.

“We’re governing high school sports, we are overseeing this middle school project … I hope this leads to the development of a strong middle school program,” Tackett said.

Because middle school athletes have needs that are different from high school athletes, the yet-to-be-named committee members “can’t just Xerox the high school rules,” Tackett said.

High school sports in the state are governed by the bylaws of the KHSAA, but there is no similar organization for middle school athletics, for which local school boards make their own rules. Also, private citizens have established nonprofit organizations to establish playoffs and championships in some areas of the state for middle school sports such as football and wrestling.

In 1993, a task force recommended that the KHSAA expand its scope to include middle school athletics, but that was never done because of finances and lack of manpower. Tackett said the KHSAA can now handle the oversight of health and safety rules.

Under the proposals, beginning with the 2014-15 school year, students would not be able to compete in middle school during a year in which they are repeating a grade for any reason, under the regulation. Students could compete in later middle school years, Tackett said.

A similar rule has been in place for high school students for years, Tackett said.

Middle school students wouldn’t be able to play more games than high school students are allowed to play. Under Kentucky law, seventh- and eighth-grade students may play at the high school level in most sports except soccer, wrestling and football. That wouldn’t change under the new regulation.

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Black Bears fall in state AAU quarterfinals
by John Middleton
Sports Editor
Jun 17, 2013 | 1916 views | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Harlan County won’t enter the 2014 basketball season with the expectations that were placed on the team in past seasons. However, if the their performance in the Kentucky AAU Tournament at the Kentucky Basketball Academy last weekend is any indication, the Black Bears will likely be in the hunt for a regional championship again next year.

“We learned that even though we lost a lot of players that we have a very good basketball team. We really like this group. They play hard and together,” said Harlan County assistant coach Michael Jones. “We have a lot of things to work on like everybody else, but I like our chances.”

Harlan County’s tournament path began in a difficult group. The Bears fell to state contender Henry Clay in the first game of group play, before dropping a 56-54 decision against 14th Region power Perry Central. The Black Bears then cruised to a 76-45 victory over Cordia.

“We finally put things together and played well against Cordia. It was tough coming off of back-to-back losses, but the kids bounced back,” Jones said. “Cordia ended up making it to the final four, so it was a big win for our kids. That gave them a lot of momentum going into tournament play.”

Harlan County then turned in a dominant 91-44 victory over East Jessamine in the first round of tournament play. The Jaguars went 23-8 last season, but were no match for the Black Bears.

“East Jessamine has a solid team. The score probably doesn’t indicate that, but they do. Our kids played really well. Beating a team like that was a good way to open the tournament,” Jones said.

Harlan County picked up its biggest win of the summer in the round of 16, knocking off 15th Region champion Johnson Central 72-65.

“Johnson Central has a really good team with everybody back. That was the first game they have lost all summer,” said Jones. “They beat us by 13 in the second game of the summer, so that just showed how far the kids have come and what type of kids we have. That game had a regional tournament atmosphere. We beat a really good team that will be in the top 10 in the state when the preseason rankings come out.”

Tyler Miller shined in the victory over Johnson Central. The junior forward finished with 18 points and 16 rebounds against the Golden Eagles and Shane Hall, who is rated as the 19th best forward in the 2014 class by scout.com.

“Miller was excited to play in that game. He really went after it, and played as hard as he could possibly play,” Jones said. “When he gives that type of effort it makes everybody on the team better. It was great to see him play well against Shane Hall.”

The Bears’ run came to an end in the quarterfinals in an 81-73 loss to Lexington Christian Academy.

Harlan County received consistent play from the forward trio of Miller, Zach Caldwell and Fred Massey throughout the event. That group is expected to lead the team next season.

“All three of them had real solid tournaments. Caldwell was really consistent. He shot the ball well from the 3-point line and did a good job competing against Shane Hall and (Perry Central’s) Justin Johnson. Fred gives you all he’s got all the time. He does the little things that don’t always show up in the box score.”

Jones said juniors Cody Bumgardner and Trey Sanders were also solid in the backcourt.

“Trey Sanders had a heck of a weekend down there, and then the leadership of Cody Bumgardner really makes this team go. It was a solid team effort,” Jones said.

Harlan County continued to get strong play from its freshman class, including 32 points from Cameron Carmical in three elimination games.

“Cameron is so intelligent about the game of basketball. He makes us better when he is out on the floor,” Jones said. “Treyce Spurlock played a heck of a game against Johnson Central. Those two freshmen are going to make this team better.”

Harlan County will likely close the summer schedule today at home against Middlesboro.

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Middle school sports may fall under regulations
Jun 17, 2013 | 160 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

LEXINGTON (AP) — Kentucky lawmakers are reviewing a proposal that would place middle school athletics under the purview of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association, with the regulations going into effect for the 2014-15 school year.

If approved, the measure would mark the first time middle schools fell under statewide oversight.

The state board of education has already signed on to the idea. KHSAA Commissioner Julian Tackett told the Lexington Herald-Leader the lack of statewide oversight over middle school athletics has led to problems that include some schools playing more games during a season than is considered safe and parents holding students back a year simply for athletic reasons.

The regulation was filed with the Legislative Research Commission on Friday. After a month long public comment period and a public hearing, the General Assembly’s Administrative Regulation Review Subcommittee and the Interim Joint Committee on Education will give the regulation a final review.

Tackett said the agency would deal with middle schools using a different model than it uses for high schools. Instead of governing middle schools, the KHSAA would provide staff and coordination for a 21-member regionally balanced committee composed mostly of educators who have expertise in middle school athletics.

The regulation, approved by the state board of education in April, sets some fundamental guidelines, but many specific rules would be decided by the middle school committee and local school districts.

“We’re governing high school sports, we are overseeing this middle school project … I hope this leads to the development of a strong middle school program,” Tackett said.

Because middle school athletes have needs that are different from high school athletes, the yet-to-be-named committee members “can’t just Xerox the high school rules,” Tackett said.

High school sports in the state are governed by the bylaws of the KHSAA, but there is no similar organization for middle school athletics, for which local school boards make their own rules. Also, private citizens have established nonprofit organizations to establish playoffs and championships in some areas of the state for middle school sports such as football and wrestling.

In 1993, a task force recommended that the KHSAA expand its scope to include middle school athletics, but that was never done because of finances and lack of manpower. Tackett said the KHSAA can now handle the oversight of health and safety rules.

Under the proposals, beginning with the 2014-15 school year, students would not be able to compete in middle school during a year in which they are repeating a grade for any reason, under the regulation. Students could compete in later middle school years, Tackett said.

A similar rule has been in place for high school students for years, Tackett said.

Middle school students wouldn’t be able to play more games than high school students are allowed to play. Under Kentucky law, seventh- and eighth-grade students may play at the high school level in most sports except soccer, wrestling and football. That wouldn’t change under the new regulation.

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Black Bears fall in state AAU quarterfinals
by John Middleton
Sports Editor
Jun 17, 2013 | 1916 views | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Harlan County won’t enter the 2014 basketball season with the expectations that were placed on the team in past seasons. However, if the their performance in the Kentucky AAU Tournament at the Kentucky Basketball Academy last weekend is any indication, the Black Bears will likely be in the hunt for a regional championship again next year.

“We learned that even though we lost a lot of players that we have a very good basketball team. We really like this group. They play hard and together,” said Harlan County assistant coach Michael Jones. “We have a lot of things to work on like everybody else, but I like our chances.”

Harlan County’s tournament path began in a difficult group. The Bears fell to state contender Henry Clay in the first game of group play, before dropping a 56-54 decision against 14th Region power Perry Central. The Black Bears then cruised to a 76-45 victory over Cordia.

“We finally put things together and played well against Cordia. It was tough coming off of back-to-back losses, but the kids bounced back,” Jones said. “Cordia ended up making it to the final four, so it was a big win for our kids. That gave them a lot of momentum going into tournament play.”

Harlan County then turned in a dominant 91-44 victory over East Jessamine in the first round of tournament play. The Jaguars went 23-8 last season, but were no match for the Black Bears.

“East Jessamine has a solid team. The score probably doesn’t indicate that, but they do. Our kids played really well. Beating a team like that was a good way to open the tournament,” Jones said.

Harlan County picked up its biggest win of the summer in the round of 16, knocking off 15th Region champion Johnson Central 72-65.

“Johnson Central has a really good team with everybody back. That was the first game they have lost all summer,” said Jones. “They beat us by 13 in the second game of the summer, so that just showed how far the kids have come and what type of kids we have. That game had a regional tournament atmosphere. We beat a really good team that will be in the top 10 in the state when the preseason rankings come out.”

Tyler Miller shined in the victory over Johnson Central. The junior forward finished with 18 points and 16 rebounds against the Golden Eagles and Shane Hall, who is rated as the 19th best forward in the 2014 class by scout.com.

“Miller was excited to play in that game. He really went after it, and played as hard as he could possibly play,” Jones said. “When he gives that type of effort it makes everybody on the team better. It was great to see him play well against Shane Hall.”

The Bears’ run came to an end in the quarterfinals in an 81-73 loss to Lexington Christian Academy.

Harlan County received consistent play from the forward trio of Miller, Zach Caldwell and Fred Massey throughout the event. That group is expected to lead the team next season.

“All three of them had real solid tournaments. Caldwell was really consistent. He shot the ball well from the 3-point line and did a good job competing against Shane Hall and (Perry Central’s) Justin Johnson. Fred gives you all he’s got all the time. He does the little things that don’t always show up in the box score.”

Jones said juniors Cody Bumgardner and Trey Sanders were also solid in the backcourt.

“Trey Sanders had a heck of a weekend down there, and then the leadership of Cody Bumgardner really makes this team go. It was a solid team effort,” Jones said.

Harlan County continued to get strong play from its freshman class, including 32 points from Cameron Carmical in three elimination games.

“Cameron is so intelligent about the game of basketball. He makes us better when he is out on the floor,” Jones said. “Treyce Spurlock played a heck of a game against Johnson Central. Those two freshmen are going to make this team better.”

Harlan County will likely close the summer schedule today at home against Middlesboro.

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Middle school sports may fall under regulations
Jun 17, 2013 | 160 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

LEXINGTON (AP) — Kentucky lawmakers are reviewing a proposal that would place middle school athletics under the purview of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association, with the regulations going into effect for the 2014-15 school year.

If approved, the measure would mark the first time middle schools fell under statewide oversight.

The state board of education has already signed on to the idea. KHSAA Commissioner Julian Tackett told the Lexington Herald-Leader the lack of statewide oversight over middle school athletics has led to problems that include some schools playing more games during a season than is considered safe and parents holding students back a year simply for athletic reasons.

The regulation was filed with the Legislative Research Commission on Friday. After a month long public comment period and a public hearing, the General Assembly’s Administrative Regulation Review Subcommittee and the Interim Joint Committee on Education will give the regulation a final review.

Tackett said the agency would deal with middle schools using a different model than it uses for high schools. Instead of governing middle schools, the KHSAA would provide staff and coordination for a 21-member regionally balanced committee composed mostly of educators who have expertise in middle school athletics.

The regulation, approved by the state board of education in April, sets some fundamental guidelines, but many specific rules would be decided by the middle school committee and local school districts.

“We’re governing high school sports, we are overseeing this middle school project … I hope this leads to the development of a strong middle school program,” Tackett said.

Because middle school athletes have needs that are different from high school athletes, the yet-to-be-named committee members “can’t just Xerox the high school rules,” Tackett said.

High school sports in the state are governed by the bylaws of the KHSAA, but there is no similar organization for middle school athletics, for which local school boards make their own rules. Also, private citizens have established nonprofit organizations to establish playoffs and championships in some areas of the state for middle school sports such as football and wrestling.

In 1993, a task force recommended that the KHSAA expand its scope to include middle school athletics, but that was never done because of finances and lack of manpower. Tackett said the KHSAA can now handle the oversight of health and safety rules.

Under the proposals, beginning with the 2014-15 school year, students would not be able to compete in middle school during a year in which they are repeating a grade for any reason, under the regulation. Students could compete in later middle school years, Tackett said.

A similar rule has been in place for high school students for years, Tackett said.

Middle school students wouldn’t be able to play more games than high school students are allowed to play. Under Kentucky law, seventh- and eighth-grade students may play at the high school level in most sports except soccer, wrestling and football. That wouldn’t change under the new regulation.

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Black Bears fall in state AAU quarterfinals
by John Middleton
Sports Editor
Jun 17, 2013 | 1916 views | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Harlan County won’t enter the 2014 basketball season with the expectations that were placed on the team in past seasons. However, if the their performance in the Kentucky AAU Tournament at the Kentucky Basketball Academy last weekend is any indication, the Black Bears will likely be in the hunt for a regional championship again next year.

“We learned that even though we lost a lot of players that we have a very good basketball team. We really like this group. They play hard and together,” said Harlan County assistant coach Michael Jones. “We have a lot of things to work on like everybody else, but I like our chances.”

Harlan County’s tournament path began in a difficult group. The Bears fell to state contender Henry Clay in the first game of group play, before dropping a 56-54 decision against 14th Region power Perry Central. The Black Bears then cruised to a 76-45 victory over Cordia.

“We finally put things together and played well against Cordia. It was tough coming off of back-to-back losses, but the kids bounced back,” Jones said. “Cordia ended up making it to the final four, so it was a big win for our kids. That gave them a lot of momentum going into tournament play.”

Harlan County then turned in a dominant 91-44 victory over East Jessamine in the first round of tournament play. The Jaguars went 23-8 last season, but were no match for the Black Bears.

“East Jessamine has a solid team. The score probably doesn’t indicate that, but they do. Our kids played really well. Beating a team like that was a good way to open the tournament,” Jones said.

Harlan County picked up its biggest win of the summer in the round of 16, knocking off 15th Region champion Johnson Central 72-65.

“Johnson Central has a really good team with everybody back. That was the first game they have lost all summer,” said Jones. “They beat us by 13 in the second game of the summer, so that just showed how far the kids have come and what type of kids we have. That game had a regional tournament atmosphere. We beat a really good team that will be in the top 10 in the state when the preseason rankings come out.”

Tyler Miller shined in the victory over Johnson Central. The junior forward finished with 18 points and 16 rebounds against the Golden Eagles and Shane Hall, who is rated as the 19th best forward in the 2014 class by scout.com.

“Miller was excited to play in that game. He really went after it, and played as hard as he could possibly play,” Jones said. “When he gives that type of effort it makes everybody on the team better. It was great to see him play well against Shane Hall.”

The Bears’ run came to an end in the quarterfinals in an 81-73 loss to Lexington Christian Academy.

Harlan County received consistent play from the forward trio of Miller, Zach Caldwell and Fred Massey throughout the event. That group is expected to lead the team next season.

“All three of them had real solid tournaments. Caldwell was really consistent. He shot the ball well from the 3-point line and did a good job competing against Shane Hall and (Perry Central’s) Justin Johnson. Fred gives you all he’s got all the time. He does the little things that don’t always show up in the box score.”

Jones said juniors Cody Bumgardner and Trey Sanders were also solid in the backcourt.

“Trey Sanders had a heck of a weekend down there, and then the leadership of Cody Bumgardner really makes this team go. It was a solid team effort,” Jones said.

Harlan County continued to get strong play from its freshman class, including 32 points from Cameron Carmical in three elimination games.

“Cameron is so intelligent about the game of basketball. He makes us better when he is out on the floor,” Jones said. “Treyce Spurlock played a heck of a game against Johnson Central. Those two freshmen are going to make this team better.”

Harlan County will likely close the summer schedule today at home against Middlesboro.

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Middle school sports may fall under regulations
Jun 17, 2013 | 160 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

LEXINGTON (AP) — Kentucky lawmakers are reviewing a proposal that would place middle school athletics under the purview of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association, with the regulations going into effect for the 2014-15 school year.

If approved, the measure would mark the first time middle schools fell under statewide oversight.

The state board of education has already signed on to the idea. KHSAA Commissioner Julian Tackett told the Lexington Herald-Leader the lack of statewide oversight over middle school athletics has led to problems that include some schools playing more games during a season than is considered safe and parents holding students back a year simply for athletic reasons.

The regulation was filed with the Legislative Research Commission on Friday. After a month long public comment period and a public hearing, the General Assembly’s Administrative Regulation Review Subcommittee and the Interim Joint Committee on Education will give the regulation a final review.

Tackett said the agency would deal with middle schools using a different model than it uses for high schools. Instead of governing middle schools, the KHSAA would provide staff and coordination for a 21-member regionally balanced committee composed mostly of educators who have expertise in middle school athletics.

The regulation, approved by the state board of education in April, sets some fundamental guidelines, but many specific rules would be decided by the middle school committee and local school districts.

“We’re governing high school sports, we are overseeing this middle school project … I hope this leads to the development of a strong middle school program,” Tackett said.

Because middle school athletes have needs that are different from high school athletes, the yet-to-be-named committee members “can’t just Xerox the high school rules,” Tackett said.

High school sports in the state are governed by the bylaws of the KHSAA, but there is no similar organization for middle school athletics, for which local school boards make their own rules. Also, private citizens have established nonprofit organizations to establish playoffs and championships in some areas of the state for middle school sports such as football and wrestling.

In 1993, a task force recommended that the KHSAA expand its scope to include middle school athletics, but that was never done because of finances and lack of manpower. Tackett said the KHSAA can now handle the oversight of health and safety rules.

Under the proposals, beginning with the 2014-15 school year, students would not be able to compete in middle school during a year in which they are repeating a grade for any reason, under the regulation. Students could compete in later middle school years, Tackett said.

A similar rule has been in place for high school students for years, Tackett said.

Middle school students wouldn’t be able to play more games than high school students are allowed to play. Under Kentucky law, seventh- and eighth-grade students may play at the high school level in most sports except soccer, wrestling and football. That wouldn’t change under the new regulation.

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