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Lady Bears reach regional final, one match from state
by Jeff Linville
Staff Reporter
<p>Jeff Linville | The News</p><p>After focusing primarily on doubles in recent weeks, Mount Airy’s Davi Barbour gets back to playing singles in the dual-team format. Barbour and the Lady Bears blanked Chatham Central 6-0.</p>

Jeff Linville | The News

After focusing primarily on doubles in recent weeks, Mount Airy’s Davi Barbour gets back to playing singles in the dual-team format. Barbour and the Lady Bears blanked Chatham Central 6-0.

slideshow
<p>Jeff Linville | The News</p><p>Mount Airy’s Jade Hughes hits a forehand on the indoor courts in Greensboro. The confined feeling of being indoors seemed to affect some players’ accuracy.</p>

Jeff Linville | The News

Mount Airy’s Jade Hughes hits a forehand on the indoor courts in Greensboro. The confined feeling of being indoors seemed to affect some players’ accuracy.

slideshow

GREENSBORO — The Lady Bears moved a step closer to defending their state tennis title with a sweep of Chatham Central Tuesday.

Because of the strong winds and occasional rain from Hurricane Sandy, Monday’s regional semifinal was moved to Tuesday and to a new location. Rather than home-court advantage, Mount Airy played at the Piedmont Indoor Tennis Center off Wendover Avenue in Greensboro.

Coach Scott Kniskern said he was proud of the girls for dealing with a lot of issues (some not related to tennis) and putting up a 6-0 shutout in singles to clinch the match without needing doubles play.

They had the match postponed, then tried to practice some in the elements Monday afternoon, then a 121-mile roundtrip bus ride.

The facility was unique as well. Some of the Chatham players said the courts felt different being indoors and was messing with their depth perception on ground strokes.

The surface was slightly softer than the outdoor courts at Mount Airy, too, said Kniskern. This slowed down hard shots and allowed soft volleys to die more easily.

The change was different for the parents and coaches, too. Rather than sitting in folding chairs around the chain-link fence, parents were cramming up against each other to see through doors and windows to the courts.

Also, the center didn’t have score cards at the net, so the coaches were busy running between six simultaneous games to keep up with the score.

Still, Kniskern said the center was much nicer than being outside in the gusting winds and chilly temperatures.

The players appeared a little tentative at first, but then settled down and played their matches, the coach said.

The last two to finish were fifth seed Bree Hughes and sixth seed Carley VanHoy.

“Bree and Carley fought through two really tough matches,” he said. “We needed one of those to clinch the match.”

Assistant Coach Rodney Pell said the squad could see Tuesday how important it was for all the girls to play well and not give the opponent a chance to rally in doubles play.

Top seed Jordan Jackson and fourth seed Haley Thomas raced through their matches.

Jackson defeated Cayley Oldham 6-0, 6-1, and Thomas won 6-1, 6-0 over Jessica Cockman.

Second seed Davi Barbour was next to finish at 6-2, 6-1 over Evan Moody. Then third seed Jade Hughes won 6-3, 6-0 over Hannah Batten.

That made the score 4-0 in the first-to-five format.

Bree Hughes fell behind 2-3 at the start, but came back to win four of the next five games for a 6-4 set.

Abby Wilkins came back with a 6-4 set of her own to force a third-set tiebreaker.

In the meantime, VanHoy won her first set 6-2, but Alli Maness battled her to a 6-6 tie and a second-set tiebreaker.

Bree Hughes won her third set 10-5 to clinch the match, then minutes later VanHoy took a 7-3 tiebreaker to keep the team perfect on the day.

Next up is Gray Stone Day (18-0), which defeated Bishop McGuinness 5-1 on Monday.

The Bears already have some familiarity with Gray Stone. Jackson beat that team’s top player in both the regional and state semifinals. Barbour and Thomas lost to Gray Stone’s doubles team in the state final last weekend.

Kniskern said he told his team at the start of the state playoffs that if the girls wanted to come out of the West and defend their state title, they likely would have to go through Gray Stone to get there.

On the eastern side of the brackets, N.C. School of Science and Math (14-3) will host Franklin Academy (13-6) today in the East regional final.

Mount Airy and Gray Stone are scheduled to play at 4 p.m. today, but the threat of rain could push that over to Thursday.

The state final will be played Saturday afternoon in Burlington.

Reach Jeff Linville at jlinville@heartlandpublications.com or at 719-1920.

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Annie Malara
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I am the mother of Dusty's child. I have sole custody of that minor and no authority was given to you to use my Son's name or picture in this paper. Remove it, or I will bring a lawsuit against you. I have already informed my lawyer. You have 24 hours to do so.
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It is terrible that the truth will be deleted to protect a journalist from making the mistake of praising a guy who does not deserve anything but jail time. I think that an apology should be given to your readers for giving the wrong idea about someone who does not take of his child. It is illegal to run false information in a news paper. Thanks for printing that he does have a job by the way, both NY and NC will love to know that.
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Annie Malara
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June 17, 2013
I am the mother of Dusty's child. I have sole custody of that minor and no authority was given to you to use my Son's name or picture in this paper. Remove it, or I will bring a lawsuit against you. I have already informed my lawyer. You have 24 hours to do so.
ralflinkletter
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June 17, 2013
It is terrible that the truth will be deleted to protect a journalist from making the mistake of praising a guy who does not deserve anything but jail time. I think that an apology should be given to your readers for giving the wrong idea about someone who does not take of his child. It is illegal to run false information in a news paper. Thanks for printing that he does have a job by the way, both NY and NC will love to know that.
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That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
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I am the mother of Dusty's child. I have sole custody of that minor and no authority was given to you to use my Son's name or picture in this paper. Remove it, or I will bring a lawsuit against you. I have already informed my lawyer. You have 24 hours to do so.
ralflinkletter
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It is terrible that the truth will be deleted to protect a journalist from making the mistake of praising a guy who does not deserve anything but jail time. I think that an apology should be given to your readers for giving the wrong idea about someone who does not take of his child. It is illegal to run false information in a news paper. Thanks for printing that he does have a job by the way, both NY and NC will love to know that.
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The Canteen
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That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
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I am the mother of Dusty's child. I have sole custody of that minor and no authority was given to you to use my Son's name or picture in this paper. Remove it, or I will bring a lawsuit against you. I have already informed my lawyer. You have 24 hours to do so.
ralflinkletter
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It is terrible that the truth will be deleted to protect a journalist from making the mistake of praising a guy who does not deserve anything but jail time. I think that an apology should be given to your readers for giving the wrong idea about someone who does not take of his child. It is illegal to run false information in a news paper. Thanks for printing that he does have a job by the way, both NY and NC will love to know that.
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That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
Annie Malara
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June 17, 2013
I am the mother of Dusty's child. I have sole custody of that minor and no authority was given to you to use my Son's name or picture in this paper. Remove it, or I will bring a lawsuit against you. I have already informed my lawyer. You have 24 hours to do so.
ralflinkletter
|
June 17, 2013
It is terrible that the truth will be deleted to protect a journalist from making the mistake of praising a guy who does not deserve anything but jail time. I think that an apology should be given to your readers for giving the wrong idea about someone who does not take of his child. It is illegal to run false information in a news paper. Thanks for printing that he does have a job by the way, both NY and NC will love to know that.
Beth Pequeno
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June 17, 2013
United Fund of Surry has actually funded the 2-1-1 system for Surry County since September 2010.
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The Canteen
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June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
Annie Malara
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June 17, 2013
I am the mother of Dusty's child. I have sole custody of that minor and no authority was given to you to use my Son's name or picture in this paper. Remove it, or I will bring a lawsuit against you. I have already informed my lawyer. You have 24 hours to do so.
ralflinkletter
|
June 17, 2013
It is terrible that the truth will be deleted to protect a journalist from making the mistake of praising a guy who does not deserve anything but jail time. I think that an apology should be given to your readers for giving the wrong idea about someone who does not take of his child. It is illegal to run false information in a news paper. Thanks for printing that he does have a job by the way, both NY and NC will love to know that.
Beth Pequeno
|
June 17, 2013
United Fund of Surry has actually funded the 2-1-1 system for Surry County since September 2010.
The Canteen
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June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
Annie Malara
|
June 17, 2013
I am the mother of Dusty's child. I have sole custody of that minor and no authority was given to you to use my Son's name or picture in this paper. Remove it, or I will bring a lawsuit against you. I have already informed my lawyer. You have 24 hours to do so.
ralflinkletter
|
June 17, 2013
It is terrible that the truth will be deleted to protect a journalist from making the mistake of praising a guy who does not deserve anything but jail time. I think that an apology should be given to your readers for giving the wrong idea about someone who does not take of his child. It is illegal to run false information in a news paper. Thanks for printing that he does have a job by the way, both NY and NC will love to know that.
Beth Pequeno
|
June 17, 2013
United Fund of Surry has actually funded the 2-1-1 system for Surry County since September 2010.