„Overtime (Ō’vər-tīm’): n. A period of playing time added after the expiration of the set time limit.‰
Temple Tribune CITY
templecitytribune.com
Overtime: A Modest Proposal
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 - OCTOBER 4, 2009 VOLUME 2, NO. 39
MONDAY EDITION An edition of the
Monrovia WEEKLY &
ARCADIA WEEKLY
FREE
REFEREES: NO OVERTIME PAY, NO OVERTIME PLAY
In college and high school football an overtime procedure is used to determine the winner. This method is sometimes referred to as a “Kansas Playoff “or “Kansas Plan” because of its origins for high school football in that state. What Follows is a Brief Summary of the Rules: 1.A coin toss determines which side shall attempt to score first, and at which end zone the scores shall be attempted. 2.Each team in turn will receive one possession, starting with firstand-10 from a fixed point on the opponent's side of the field. The game clock does not run during overtime; the play clock, however, is enforced. 3.In high school football, the ball begins at the 10-yard line, with the option for state high school associations to use different yardage (such as the 15, 20, or 25-yard line) 4.A team's possession ends when it scores (touchdown or field goal), misses a field goal, fails to gain a first down on the final down, or loses the ball by turnover. As usual, a touchdown by the offense is followed by a try for one or two points. 5.I f t he score re mains tied at the end of the overtime procedure, an additional overtime procedure is played. The team with the second possession in one overtime procedure will have the first possession in the next overtime procedure. 6.Referees are celebrated as community heroes for taking the extra 20 minutes out of their day to satisfy the wishes of two communities and their beloved football players who work hard all week in pursuit of the W.
Temple City High’s Max Ruckle raced for 158 yards on 25 carries, averaging just over 6 yards per carry
-Photo By Terry Miller
Hard Fought Game Forced to End in Tie as Officials Refuse Overtime BY JOHN STEPHENS The officiating crew at Friday night’s football match up between the Temple City Rams and Arcadia Apaches told coaches for both teams that there would be no overtime, citing the fact that they would not be paid overtime for the extra work involved in settling the 28-28 tie. Things looked good for
Sierra Madre Won’t Pay SCAG Membership Dues
the for the Rams as Apache quarterback Justin Smith connected with Andrew Torres for a 15-yard touchdown play that put Temple City up 7-0 early in the game. Then the TC offense continued to look strong, driving 50 yards in 9 plays to take a 14-0 lead early in the second quarter. But the Apaches were not about to give up the contest this early. Follow-
ing an 87 yard kickoff return by sophomore Taylor Legace and a 45 yard fumble recovery and return for touchdown by David Schuil Arcadia scored twice in the second quarter, pulling the team up from a 14-0 deficit before the halftime break. It was not to be the last time the score would be tied on Friday night. After halftime, it looked
35th Annual Taste of Arcadia Brings Thousand to Arboretum
as though the Apaches may pull away when, with just over 3 minutes left in the 3rd quarter Taylor Legace scored on a 25-yard pass from Tuck, giving the team their first lead of the night. Tuck had 11 completions on 23 attempts Friday, passing for a total of over 150 yards before being forced onto the bench with a knee injury in the fourth quarter.
But the Rams were not without their fair share of stars to help them fight back from the turnover and special teams-incurred deficit. Quarterback Justin Smith took the ball into the end zone himself from 35 yards out to tie the game late in the third quarter to bring the game to a 21-21 tie. Temple City then retook
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Priceless Computer and Beacon Media Award Second Computer to Local Family
BY SAMEEA KAMAL A heated discussion at Tuesday’s City Council meeting regarding the payment of dues to the Southern California Association of Governments ended with the council’s decision not to pay the membership fee “This problem is that all us little towns are being mandated to do things by Sacramento and Northern California, and they have no understanding of the issues that we have here for development, considering especially that water resources are slowly disappearing,” said Councilman Don Watts. According to Watts, mandates for increased housing density require an increased
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-Photo By Terry Miller
BY TERRY MILLER The annual Taste of Arcadia held last Monday September 21, saw about 1200 people take advantage of the offerings from over 35 restaurants, breweries, wineries and a martini bar.
The event benefits the Lucky Baldwin Boy Scouts and The Arboretum Foundation this year and the Lions Club also donated money to the two local groups. The live music & danc-
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In the second week of the Beacon Media/Priceless Computer Back to School Computer Giveaway, our winner comes from Monrovia High School, a place where, as Francisco Baltazar says in his essay, computers
are becoming more and more necessary to complete assignments and keep up with studies. Francisco comes from a large family, seven of them in all, including four
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