Idaho
McDowell, FCS No. 10 Montana beat No. 3 Idaho 23-7
MOSCOW, Idaho — Clifton McDowell threw a touchdown pass and ran for a TD, Grant Glasgow kicked three field goals and Montana held on to beat Idaho 23-21 Saturday night in a battle of two of the top teams in the Football Championship Subdivision.
McDowell completed 11 of 18 passes for 116 yards, including a 76-yard touchdown to Junior Bergen in the first quarter, and scored on an 8-yard run in the second quarter that gave Montana (6-1, 3-1 Big Sky Conference), ranked No. 10 in the FCS coaches poll, a 17-0 lead. Glasgow, who made a 44-yard field goal to open the scoring, hit a 46-yarder with 2:12 left in the half but the Vandals answered with an 11-yard TD run by Anthony Woods that made it 20-7 at intermission.
Glasgow made another 44-yard field goal early in the fourth to make it a 16-point lead but Gevani McCoy threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to Hayden Hatten and the duo connected again for the 2-point conversion that made it 23-15 with 5:48 to play. The Grizzlies went three-and-out, McCoy again found Hatten, this time for a 23-yard TD, but the 2-point conversion failed and No. 3 Idaho (5-2, 3-1) trailed 23-21 with 1:47 remaining.
The Vandals recovered the ensuing onside kick, but an offsides penalty forced a re-kick, which was recovered by Montana. Idaho got a fourth-down stop and regained possession at their own 34 with 42 seconds left but McCoy — who was sacked six times and threw two interceptions — was pressured into a fumble that sealed it.
McCoy finished 26-of-37 passing for 336 yards and Hatten had 11 receptions for 139 yards.
Idaho
Obituary for Lloyd Coles at Eckersell Funeral Home
Idaho
Pocatello bounces back against previously unbeaten Teton in Holiday Shootout – East Idaho News
REXBURG – The East Idaho Holiday Tournament has taken over the area as 118 boys and girls basketball teams converge for some spirited competition to start the new year.
Perhaps no game was as intriguing – at least on the girls side – as Friday’s matchup between Pocatello and Teton.
Both teams have state tournament aspirations and have sprinted out to solid starts this season with the Thunder ranked No. 1 in 5A and the Timberwolves No. 3 in 4A.
That was enough to earn EastIdahoNews.com Game of the Week.
As for the game itself, the significance of the final result depends on who you ask.
“Today I really liked us,” Pocatello coach Sunny Evans said after the Thunder rolled to a 61-24 victory. “Yesterday we weren’t as successful doing the things we wanted to do … I was really proud of their response today. They made a decision to bounce back and they really did get all aspects of the game going.”
Pocatello suffered its first loss of the season on Thursday, falling 65-52 to Westlake (UT) in the tournament opener.
The Thunder (11-1) didn’t waste much time on Friday as their full-court pressure set the tone early and Teton (10-1) couldn’t hit its shots. The Timberwolves trailed 17-6 after one quarter and had no answers for Poky’s Kennasyn Garza inside or Abby Lusk from anywhere. Lusk finished with a game-high 18 points.
Lusk connected on a pair of 3-pointers late in the quarter to force a Teton timeout, but the Timberwolves never recovered. They trailed 35-14 at the half.
“We didn’t show out like we wanted to,” Teton coach Pat Hogan said. “We could have made it a game and controlled the ball a little better.”
Hogan noted that Teton hadn’t seen the level of play they faced Friday, so despite the score, the net result might be a positive.
“We’ve been able to get by with athleticism, but not doing the little things, against a good team like Pocatello you got to do the little things,” he said.
The loss was the first for Teton, but the Timberwolves’ season will ultimately come down to conference play, where South Fremont (11-0) and Sugar-Salem (11-0) each entered the day unbeaten, meaning the Mountain Rivers Conference was a combined 32-1 after Teton’s loss and all three teams are ranked in the latest 4A state medial poll.
As for Pocatello, Evans said she was happy to see how the team responded after a loss.
“We got some good inside-out, knocked down some 3’s, and got some inside stuff from Kenna and Abby. Guard play was good and good defense … I like my team.”
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Idaho
Idaho Parks and Recreation debuts new online reservation system on Monday
Idaho Parks and Recreation has been working all fall to instill their new Idaho Time Registration system and it goes online on Jan. 6.
There will be changes as this reservation system will have different prices — similar to reserving hotels or airplane tickets, it all comes down to demand. Plus people will have to be ready next week to reserve a campsite this summer in a state park.
“We have really seen the demand for camping in Idaho grow and we want to make it first of all easier to get their campsites,” said Robbie Johnson of Idaho Parks & Rec. “A high-demand campsite is going to cost you a little bit more, but in the time where there’s not so much demand it is going to cost you less.”
An example of this would be reserving a campsite at Ponderosa State Park near McCall around the 4th of July. That’s about as busy as it gets and the cost of a site with electricity and hookups will cost Idaho residents $42.
“So when we are talking about variations in pricing we are not talking about huge jumps,” said Johnson. “We are not here to discourage and make it harder to use our state parks, but the camping fees are what funds the state parks.”
The reservation system will allow people to reserve campsites, cabins and yurts nine months out. It will have a much easier interface, be easier to use on your smart phone and it will feature pictures that rangers take at the state parks.
“It’s going to be so much easier to find a park, look at a map, click on it and put your dates in,” said Johnson.
However, they have to unveil somehow so they chose a staggered start when the new system comes online next week. On Monday, people will be able to reserve through May 31, on Tuesday through June 30, on Wednesday through July, Thursday through August and Friday through September.
People will get put into a waiting room in the order they log on. You can reserve up to three campsites, but you don’t secure the reservation until you pay for it. Robbie Johnson advises people to consider multiple options, be quick and be prepared.
“The old reservation system is on our website and that is where you can go in and check out the map because you actually won’t be able to go into the new system until it actually launches the first week,” said Johnson.
So if you have summer plans at a favorite camping spot in your favorite state park be prepared for next week if you want to lock down some sites. If you don’t get what you want you can always check for cancellations.
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