7
September , 2010
Tuesday

Valley View Online

est. 1996

Valley View 48, Indian Hill 14 Xenia 27, Bellbrook 21 (3OT) Oakwood 27, Milton Union 7 Eaton 9, ...
Kyle Pohl connected with Robbie Skidmore for a 37-yard TD pass on the third play ...
September 09.01 — Katie Nealeigh 09.02 — Taylor Neace 09.05 — Taylor Rice 09.06 — Linda Whaley 09.07 — Jessica ...
It took two safeties and an interception by jr. defensive back Chris Lykins to wake ...
Valley View 25, Dunbar 12 Northridge 6, Bethel 42 Bellbrook 21, Miamisburg 14 Dixie 38, Twin Valley South ...
Looking for bright, charming, witty intern for unpaid position in our small, but thriving organization. ...

Archive for the ‘Featured’ Category

Roll On Big ‘O

Posted by Mike Dowden On September - 4 - 2010     ADD COMMENTS

Kyle Pohl connected with Robbie Skidmore for a 37-yard TD pass on the third play of the game as the Spartans rolled to a 48-14 win over the Indian Hill Braves. Pohl also tossed a pair of TD passes to Jordan Crouse (15 yds.) and Tyler Schenck (14 yds.) before the night was over.

It was the fourth Spartan win, in as many attempts, over the Braves and gives the team their second consecutive win of the young season. Indian Hills drops to 0-2.

Valley View quickly struck again on their second possession of the game on a TD that was set up by Chris Lykins. The jr. defensive back stole the ball out right out of the hands of the Indian Hill receiver and ran it back to the Braves 6 yard line. Two plays later, Jake Jarbo, scores on a 1 yard run to boost the Spartan lead, 14-0.

Ben Fannin picks up a first down to help the Spartans to a 48-14 win over the Indian Hill Braves.

“We worked on that pass from Kyle (Pohl) to Robbie (Skidmore) over and over all week,” said Spartan head coach Jay Niswonger. ” I knew if we could just get out in front fast, it would take some of the wind out and set the tone for the game.”

Score fast, they did. Excellent receptions by Jordan Krouse and Skidmore gave the Spartans great gains throughout the second quarter that left Tyler Schenck open in the endzone on two occasions for scores that helped Valley View to a 34-0 lead at the half.

The Braves appeared to come alive in the second half. On their first possession, they marched 8o yards to score on a 1 yard run by sr. QB, Sam Voss. However, the Braves wouldn’t score again until late in the fourth quarter, on a Voss 21-yard run, that was too little, and much too late.

Valley View takes on Bishop Fenwick in Week 3. It will be the home opener against the Falcons. Fenwick is also 2-0 with wins over Oakwood (33-8) and Talawanda (42-0). They were 5-5 in 2009.

Valley View 14 20 7 7; 48
Indian Hill 0 0 7 7 14

VV–Skidmore 37 pass from Pohl (Miller kick)
VV–Jarbo 1 run (Miller kick)
VV–Schenck 15 pass from Pohl (Miller kick)
VV–Schenck 5 run (Miller kick)
VV–Crouse 14 pass from Pohl (kick failed)
IH–Voss 1 run (Thompson kick)
VV–Jarbo 20 run (Miller kick)
VV–Gulling 1 run (Miller kick)
IH–Voss 21 run (Thompson kick)

Popularity: 4% [?]

Birthdays This Month

Posted by Mike Dowden On September - 1 - 2010     ADD COMMENTS

September

09.01 — Katie Nealeigh
09.02 — Taylor Neace
09.05 — Taylor Rice
09.06 — Linda Whaley
09.07 — Jessica Stubbs
09.09 — Donnie Quillen
09.09 — Ryan Johnson
09.11 — Brittanny Back
09.13 — Jackie Cox
09.15 — Bud Hosler
09.16 — Roy Powers
09.16 — Kyle Inloes
09.17 — Hannah Clark
09.21 — Kyle Samworth
09.22 — Korry Frizzell
09.23 — Callie Kennard
09.24 — Dalton Pate
09.25 — Mary Kay Hogg
09.25 — Mitchell Kemper
09.26 — Bill Wendel
09.26 — Mason Riley
09.28 — Tony Travisano
09.29 — Jon Tipton
09.30 — Katie Hensley

Popularity: 71% [?]

Spartans Overcome First Half Nap

Posted by Mike Dowden On August - 28 - 2010     ADD COMMENTS

It took two safeties and an interception by jr. defensive back Chris Lykins to wake up the sleeping Spartans who went on to  defeat the Dunbar Wolverines, 25-12,  in the second game of a twi-night double header at Welcome Stadium.

Dunbar drew first blood in the second quarter with a 2-yard touchdown by Darold Kelly. The point after failed to give the Wolverines a 6-0 lead. But that score didn’t come easy. A blocking in the back penalty brought back a 79-yard TD run. That began a string of five penalties that saw the drive begin in the first quarter before finally culminating in the 2nd quarter touchdown. The Wolverines were flagged a total of 12 times for 101 yards.


Jake Jarbo rushed for 155 yards on 34 carries in his Spartan debut

Jake Jarbo rushed for 155 yards on 34 carries in his Spartan debut

Dunbar’s first half miscues were Valley View’s salvation. The Spartans clawed for 22 yards on 27 plays, all on the ground. In a surprising twist from 2009′s aerial attack, which saw sr. QB Kyle Pohl amass 1,746 yards in the air, Coach Jay Niswonger appears to be on the Woody Hayes path to 3 yds and a cloud of dust.

Sr. running back Jake Jarbo appears to be Niswonger’s go to guy in the back field. Jarbo, in his first season with the Spartans, rushed for 155 yards on 34 carries. Jarbo, a transfer from Preble Shawnee, rushed for 1,028 yds last season.

Valley View owned the second half, despite fumbling away the ball just short of scoring during  their first possession. But the turning point came on Dunbar’s next possession when the Spartans defense stepped up and stuffed the Wolverines in the end zone to pickup their first points of the evening. On the ensuing free-kick, Valley View’s Kenny Duff (so. LB) returned the ball 26 yards to set up the Spartans scoring opportunity. From this point on, Valley View was in control.

Valley View will need to be in control from the very first snap of the ball in next week’s showdown with Indian Hill. The Braves, who lost to McNicholas 34-10 in week one, took a commanding lead in their 2009 match-up with the Spartans, before Valley View came roaring back in the second half to win 37-27.  The Spartans ended that game with 336 yds. of total offense.

Popularity: 7% [?]

Intern Wanted

Posted by Mike Dowden On August - 11 - 2010     ADD COMMENTS

Looking for bright, charming, witty intern for unpaid position in our small, but thriving organization. Work after school. Work on some weekends. Work when it’s convenient for us.

You Will Get Smarter For It

Do you know HTML? Perhaps dabbled with Photoshop? Excel spreadsheets? The Internet? What do you know? If you know nothing now, we will teach you. If you already know these things, then you can teach us.

In the end you will be a more rounded person, broke but not destitute, and feeling alive for the first time in your life.

Since we can’t afford to pay you with anything tangible like money, we might ask you to bring us a Diet Pepsi™ on occasion. But in the end you will have learned some valuable information about the tech world, how to build web sites, and a boatload of contacts that can help you later in life.

Call us, 696-9099 and we might answer, but email us and we always will.

Popularity: 3% [?]

Facts Get In The Way Of Germantown Press Editorials

Posted by Mike Dowden On August - 8 - 2010     1 COMMENT

I would have to completely disagree with Mr. Helmers’ assessment of the school board meeting of July 27 as published in his August 5 Germantown Press Letter to the Editor. As there are two sides to every story, I can provide a rendition of the meeting based on something more factual and not the emotional scolding that was eventually published.

Shame on you

The first error Mr. Helmers makes is the last minute change in the meeting date. While the meeting didn’t occur on its regular day, the date change had been posted on the District web site since May. The same web site Mr. Helmers quoted in his July 15 Letter to the Editor (the same letter that contained a litany of factual inaccuracies). It was even noted at the previous board meeting and public hearing that the next meeting date had slipped one day.

The School board did not refuse voter input on their decision. The School Board made it abundantly clear at the start of the meeting (during what Mr. Helmers describes as a brief introduction) that Public Participation was the third item on the agenda. To report that Board President, Jenny Michael, breezed by that part is highly inaccurate, especially since Mr. Helmers didn’t feel that it was made clear. (How would one know the public forum was breezed by when they didn’t know that was the time for public participation?) Mrs. Michael also was clear when agenda item number three was reached that, “at this time we will open the floor for Public Participation.”

I was certainly astounded, as I looked around the room that no one spoke up. And it appeared to me, that the board members were equally astounded that no one stood to speak. I say that they looked astounded because I watched as each board member surveyed the room looking to see who would stand and speak. What Mr. Helmers probably perceived as members cowardly looking down at their papers was them looking to see what agenda item four contained when Mrs. Michael finally said, “If no one has anything, we’ll move on to agenda item number four.”

It may have been the first school board meeting for those in attendance, maybe even their first government meeting of any kind. If so, then for future reference, Public Participation is when the public gets to stand up and speak. It’s done this way by every government entity in this area and virtually every meeting I’ve attended regionally. There is a reason parliamentary procedure exists. If people were allowed to speak up throughout the entire meeting, no business would ever get done and meetings would last well into the night.

In addition, there was a public hearing in which people had the opportunity to speak. For the headline to infer that the “School Board refused voter input on decision” because of failure to speak up at the proper time during one meeting, is ludicrous and inaccurate.

I didn’t see any arrogance emanate from the board, as a whole, or by any single member. I did see a significant amount of arrogance in both Mr. Helmers July 15 and July 27 letters. Arrogance that there is only one right answer when it comes to this issue. Arrogance that only one side has been wronged. This kind of grandstanding, that occurs regularly in the editorial section of the Germantown Press, is not “guiding your representatives in a productive manner.” This is nothing more than some ostentatious performance to ridicule our elected representatives into succumbing to the will of the minority. This isn’t productive guidance.

Researching and presenting the facts is productive guidance. The problem with this issue is the facts bear out that the school district will save money without any additional taxpayer dollars being spent and that certainly doesn’t suit the agenda of those wanting a new superintendent.

The missing components from the two letters to the editor are facts and “guidance”. Since the facts get in the way of what the minority want as a resolution, it’s easier to ridicule the school board. And since the solution is counter to the inaccuracies provided, it’s easier to say we need to give our elected representatives “direction.”

The facts on this issue are very simple. The superintendent has three years remaining on the contract. The superintendent intends to fulfill those three remaining years. If the school board allows her to retire and then rehire at a lower salary, the school district saves $63,000 over the next three years. If the school board bends to the whim of the less-than-silent minority then the superintendent doesn’t retire, completes the remaining three years left on the contract, and costs the school district $63,000 they didn’t have to spend.

This crazy loophole by the state is not limited to just administrators, as suggested by the distinguished Lois Campbell’s July 15 Letter to the Editor. Anyone is eligible including teachers and public employees and other local leaders in our police and fire departments that have also retired and subsequently rehired.

This isn’t a new phenomenon. It happens in the private sector as well. We should be directing that jealousy towards changing the state law. Denying an individual’s rights to take advantage of the law doesn’t fix the “problem.”

Don’t think that for one minute the Germantown Press isn’t culpable in this indictment of the school board. Over sensationalizing the headlines of “editorials” that provides no basis in fact makes for a great buzz, but it’s time the paper start writing editorials of their own. Does the editor of the paper even understand the issues in Germantown and Farmersville? It has appeared for a very long time that they are just content to take local advertising dollars and hope that these “editorials” will suffice as local coverage of the issues.

How many times (every week is the answer) can you recycle the same story about immunizations in Farmersville? How many times can you take a paid advertisement for pee-wee football, baseball, or soccer sign-ups and turn it in to an article? When are you really going to provide full coverage of local news and sports and not rely on parents sending you pictures and information just so there is something in the paper about an event? When will there be real editorials and not the syndicated filler you use to boost the number of pages you have in an issue so that you can justify the advertising volume? It’s obvious how you have been overcoming that content shortage. Too much advertising and not enough content and you would lose your status as a newspaper.

Allowing such editorials, that distort the facts and are based entirely on emotion, is not good for our community. I’m not suggesting denying these “editorials.” I’m suggesting the Germantown Press act more responsibly by writing intelligent articles of their own that provide the facts, and when they do, headline it as such without the blatant editorializing.

One final point. Mr. Helmers didn’t mention that he left before the meeting’s conclusion and did not hear the board members express why they had voted the way they did. Had he stayed, he would have not only heard the board acknowledge the calls and letters they received on both sides of the issue, but also the facts behind the issue. Facts he still may have disagreed with, but the facts none-the-less.

And, by the way, for the woman Mr. Helmers described as a “hero”.” A person might commend her for interjecting, but to label her a hero certainly punctuates the low criteria one sets for someone to attain hero status. I guess that makes me a hero too?

Popularity: 4% [?]

FABA Scholarship

Posted by Mike Dowden On April - 2 - 2010     ADD COMMENTS

Yearly, the Farmersville Area Business Association (FABA)  has provided  a scholarship to financially assist any qualified Valley View high school student who is planning to attend an accredited two or four-yearcollege or university.

The FABA Scholarship is open to Valley View High School graduating seniors who have met all the requirements set forth by the FABA Scholarship Committee.

Those requirements include:

  • Submit a completed FABA Scholarship Application Form by May 1st.
  • Have a 7-semester grade point average of 2.5 or higher.
  • Provide a copy of the FAFSA form.
  • Provide a letter of acceptance from college, if available.
  • Provide two letters of recommendation.
scholarship

FABA Scholarship Opportunity

Final selection is made by the scholarship committee comprised of at least three FABA members. Criteria for final selection may include the following:

  • Attendance
  • Grade point average
  • Involvement in extracurricular activities
  • Community service

The winner will be officially presented their scholarship award during the commencement ceremonies.

Download FABA Scholarship Application Form

Popularity: 97% [?]

Recent Comments

Part-time Photographer, Web Application Developer, and former Mayor, you can generally see him wandering the sidelines at most football games. You will recognized him from the picture. Usually he can be found on the phone troubleshooting computer user errors. Mike has been contributing to Valley View Online since its inception in 1996.

Recent Comments

Playoff Picture

On Oct-27-2008
Reported by Mike Dowden

Spartans Spoil Franklin Homecoming

On Oct-4-2008
Reported by Mike Dowden

It’s Almost Football Time

On Aug-13-2009
Reported by Mike Dowden

Brigitte Does Thanksgiving Tips

On Nov-22-2008
Reported by Mike Dowden

Donson Touchdown – Milton Union 2008 09 19

On Sep-20-2008
Reported by Mike Dowden