Fatcow Icon
Lions hold off Whitley, 58-56
by Jay Compton
Sports Editor
Jay Compton|Daily News
Pineville senior forward Jacob Skinner releases a free throw late in Friday's game. Skinner went six-for-six from the line over the final 34 seconds and finished with 14 points as the Lions held off Whitley County 58-56.
Jay Compton|Daily News Pineville senior forward Jacob Skinner releases a free throw late in Friday's game. Skinner went six-for-six from the line over the final 34 seconds and finished with 14 points as the Lions held off Whitley County 58-56.
slideshow

PINEVILLE —The Mountain Lions made it four wins in a row on Friday as they edged Whitley County 58-56.

Pineville as shown a knack lately of pulling out the close ones and Friday it was senior forward Jacob Skinner hitting six straight free throws over the final 34 seconds to secure the win. All of them were one-and-ones and every one turned out to be important as Whitley’s Zack Rutherford hit a 3 from midcourt at the buzzer to set the final.

“Jacob did a great job for us and he’s been coming along. He’s always been one of our top offensive players and he’s picking it up on defense, too,” Mountain Lions coach J.D. Strange said. “He was out after gall bladder surgery and now he’s starting to play more like he can and that’s a big asset to our team. When our kids play together and pull for each other I think we can be really fun to watch.”

Senior center John Simpson led the Lions with 21 points while Skinner finished with 14 and Jared Philpot added nine.

Michael Powers led the Colonels with 16 while Boston Bryant added 15 and Rutherford 11.

It was a tight game most of the way. Skinner scored four points in the first quarter and the Lions got a 3 from Seth Jeffrey and baskets from Byron David Asher and Simpson. Bryant scored six points and Powers hit a 3 for Whitley as Pineville led 11-9 after one.

Bryant and Luke Woods scored five points each in the second period for Whitley and it was tied at 23 by halftime.

Simpson got going in the third quarter and scored 10 of his points. Pineville also got six from Philpot and a Cody Collett baskets to take a 41-40 lead into the fourth.

It turns out the Lions had the Colonels right where they wanted them.

“It’s good lately that we’ve been able to perform in the close games because when you get to tournament play you’re going to have some and you want to have some experience with it,” Strange said. “At least we’re getting that experience.”

Pineville got a free throw and then a basket from Simpson to go up by four. But Whitley answered with 3s from Rutherford and Powers. Later Powers laid in a basket after a Rutherford steal and Whitley was up 50-49 with 2:50 to play.

A three-point play from Asher put the Lions back on top and Skinner did the rest from the free throw line as Pineville held on.

“Our group of kids have got a wonderful opportunity in front of them and I just hope they realize it. Whitley County has not got a bad team, they’re very disciplined and they’ve played in a lot of real close games,” Strange said. “We did the right things to win and came out on top. (But) we’ve got to keep getting better and take advantage of the times when we’ve got the ball and make the little things count.

Pineville (16-9) will host North Laurel on Tuesday while Whitley County (7-19) hosts Clinton County on Monday.

— — —

Whitley Co…..9…14…17…16 — 56

Pineville…….11…12…18…17 — 58

WHITLEY COUNTY (56): Michael Powers 16, Boston Bryant 15, Zack Rutherford 11, Luke Woods 5, James Sasko 4, Matt Lawson 3, Devin Rutherford 2.

PINEVILLE (58): John Simpson 21, Jacob Skinner 14, Jared Philpot 9, Byron David Asher 5, Seth Jeffrey 5, Cody Collett 4, Connor Ford 0, Dalton Ledbetter 0, Isaac Longworth 0.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Pineville native opens for “Roots and Boots”
PINEVILLE — Pineville’s own talented 21-year-old Alyson Blair Combs will be performing at the Ken...
May 24, 2012 | 0 0 comments | 145 145 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Harrogate’s Shane Smart: Dedicated dad first, tough truck driver second
HARROGATE, Tenn. — Shane Smart would rather you know that he’s a devoted father than a cast membe...
Feb 23, 2012 | 1 1 comments | 155 155 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
SKCTC to present Ky. Chautauqua speaker at Central Auditorium
MIDDLESBORO - Southeast Kentucky Community & Technical College and the Department of Diversity an...
Feb 23, 2012 | 0 0 comments | 143 143 recommendations | email to a friend
full story


News
download June 19, 2013
download June 18, 2013
forcommongood
|
June 18, 2013
Two states dramatically reduced their meth busts and the number of kids turned over to children's services after they required a prescription for pseudoephedrine(Sudafed),essential for making meth. Blame big drug companies for propaganda and lobbying in favor of meth and against prescriptions for pseudoephedrine. Sympathy to allergy suffers, such as myself, but requiring a prescription is a small inconvenience compared to filling up children's services with little kids picked up at meth busts.
Wreck sends 2 to hospital
Jun 18, 2013 | 5447 views | 0 0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Anthony Cloud|Daily News

A wreck on Tuesday sent a man and a small child to the hospital. According to Kentucky State Police Trooper Keith Baker, Kari Odom, along with Justin Tye and Odom’s two daughters, were traveling south on U.S. 25E when she lost control of her vehicle in front of Bell County High School. Baker said the vehicle hit the median and rolled onto its roof. Tye and Odom’s 3-year-old daughter were transported to Middlesboro ARH by Bell County EMS.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Read More News
Sports
download June 19, 2013
download June 18, 2013
forcommongood
|
June 18, 2013
Two states dramatically reduced their meth busts and the number of kids turned over to children's services after they required a prescription for pseudoephedrine(Sudafed),essential for making meth. Blame big drug companies for propaganda and lobbying in favor of meth and against prescriptions for pseudoephedrine. Sympathy to allergy suffers, such as myself, but requiring a prescription is a small inconvenience compared to filling up children's services with little kids picked up at meth busts.
Wreck sends 2 to hospital
Jun 18, 2013 | 5447 views | 0 0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Anthony Cloud|Daily News

A wreck on Tuesday sent a man and a small child to the hospital. According to Kentucky State Police Trooper Keith Baker, Kari Odom, along with Justin Tye and Odom’s two daughters, were traveling south on U.S. 25E when she lost control of her vehicle in front of Bell County High School. Baker said the vehicle hit the median and rolled onto its roof. Tye and Odom’s 3-year-old daughter were transported to Middlesboro ARH by Bell County EMS.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Read More Sports
Opinion
download June 19, 2013
download June 18, 2013
forcommongood
|
June 18, 2013
Two states dramatically reduced their meth busts and the number of kids turned over to children's services after they required a prescription for pseudoephedrine(Sudafed),essential for making meth. Blame big drug companies for propaganda and lobbying in favor of meth and against prescriptions for pseudoephedrine. Sympathy to allergy suffers, such as myself, but requiring a prescription is a small inconvenience compared to filling up children's services with little kids picked up at meth busts.
Wreck sends 2 to hospital
Jun 18, 2013 | 5447 views | 0 0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Anthony Cloud|Daily News

A wreck on Tuesday sent a man and a small child to the hospital. According to Kentucky State Police Trooper Keith Baker, Kari Odom, along with Justin Tye and Odom’s two daughters, were traveling south on U.S. 25E when she lost control of her vehicle in front of Bell County High School. Baker said the vehicle hit the median and rolled onto its roof. Tye and Odom’s 3-year-old daughter were transported to Middlesboro ARH by Bell County EMS.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Read More Opinion
Weather
Sponsored By:

RSS Feeds
All articles feed
News feed
Sports feed
Videos feed
Obituaries feed
Opinion feed
Local Features
download June 19, 2013
download June 18, 2013
forcommongood
|
June 18, 2013
Two states dramatically reduced their meth busts and the number of kids turned over to children's services after they required a prescription for pseudoephedrine(Sudafed),essential for making meth. Blame big drug companies for propaganda and lobbying in favor of meth and against prescriptions for pseudoephedrine. Sympathy to allergy suffers, such as myself, but requiring a prescription is a small inconvenience compared to filling up children's services with little kids picked up at meth busts.
Wreck sends 2 to hospital
Jun 18, 2013 | 5447 views | 0 0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Anthony Cloud|Daily News

A wreck on Tuesday sent a man and a small child to the hospital. According to Kentucky State Police Trooper Keith Baker, Kari Odom, along with Justin Tye and Odom’s two daughters, were traveling south on U.S. 25E when she lost control of her vehicle in front of Bell County High School. Baker said the vehicle hit the median and rolled onto its roof. Tye and Odom’s 3-year-old daughter were transported to Middlesboro ARH by Bell County EMS.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Read More Local Features
Poll
Sponsored By:

download June 19, 2013
download June 18, 2013
forcommongood
|
June 18, 2013
Two states dramatically reduced their meth busts and the number of kids turned over to children's services after they required a prescription for pseudoephedrine(Sudafed),essential for making meth. Blame big drug companies for propaganda and lobbying in favor of meth and against prescriptions for pseudoephedrine. Sympathy to allergy suffers, such as myself, but requiring a prescription is a small inconvenience compared to filling up children's services with little kids picked up at meth busts.
Wreck sends 2 to hospital
Jun 18, 2013 | 5447 views | 0 0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Anthony Cloud|Daily News

A wreck on Tuesday sent a man and a small child to the hospital. According to Kentucky State Police Trooper Keith Baker, Kari Odom, along with Justin Tye and Odom’s two daughters, were traveling south on U.S. 25E when she lost control of her vehicle in front of Bell County High School. Baker said the vehicle hit the median and rolled onto its roof. Tye and Odom’s 3-year-old daughter were transported to Middlesboro ARH by Bell County EMS.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
View Previous Polls
Special Sections
download June 19, 2013
download June 18, 2013
forcommongood
|
June 18, 2013
Two states dramatically reduced their meth busts and the number of kids turned over to children's services after they required a prescription for pseudoephedrine(Sudafed),essential for making meth. Blame big drug companies for propaganda and lobbying in favor of meth and against prescriptions for pseudoephedrine. Sympathy to allergy suffers, such as myself, but requiring a prescription is a small inconvenience compared to filling up children's services with little kids picked up at meth busts.
Wreck sends 2 to hospital
Jun 18, 2013 | 5447 views | 0 0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Anthony Cloud|Daily News

A wreck on Tuesday sent a man and a small child to the hospital. According to Kentucky State Police Trooper Keith Baker, Kari Odom, along with Justin Tye and Odom’s two daughters, were traveling south on U.S. 25E when she lost control of her vehicle in front of Bell County High School. Baker said the vehicle hit the median and rolled onto its roof. Tye and Odom’s 3-year-old daughter were transported to Middlesboro ARH by Bell County EMS.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
download June 19, 2013
download June 18, 2013
forcommongood
|
June 18, 2013
Two states dramatically reduced their meth busts and the number of kids turned over to children's services after they required a prescription for pseudoephedrine(Sudafed),essential for making meth. Blame big drug companies for propaganda and lobbying in favor of meth and against prescriptions for pseudoephedrine. Sympathy to allergy suffers, such as myself, but requiring a prescription is a small inconvenience compared to filling up children's services with little kids picked up at meth busts.
Wreck sends 2 to hospital
Jun 18, 2013 | 5447 views | 0 0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Anthony Cloud|Daily News

A wreck on Tuesday sent a man and a small child to the hospital. According to Kentucky State Police Trooper Keith Baker, Kari Odom, along with Justin Tye and Odom’s two daughters, were traveling south on U.S. 25E when she lost control of her vehicle in front of Bell County High School. Baker said the vehicle hit the median and rolled onto its roof. Tye and Odom’s 3-year-old daughter were transported to Middlesboro ARH by Bell County EMS.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet