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"Uncle WiFi Is In The Iditerod!"


Mar. 15, 2012

Indeed, the uncle of this local litter is currently competing in the annual 1,000-mile Iditarod race in Alaska and Canada as a member of musher Karen Ramstead’s team of pure breed Siberian huskies. The brother of WiFi and the “dad” to these pups is Slider, owned by Linda and Mike Herdering of Husky Power Dogsledding in Accident. According to the Herderings, there are only one or two teams of pure breed Siberian huskies (known as “pretty sled dogs”) because the Alaskan husky is faster.


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Ramstead says she runs the Siberian team not to win, but to prove that show dogs can also perform and succeed in an athletic competition. As of yesterday afternoon, Ramstead and her team had just left the checkpoint of Shaktoolik. Thirteen teams had finished the race, and 40 were still racing. The four Siberian pups above are not only four completely different colors, but they sport four completely different eye pairings. The differences in deep Siberian coloring (red, black, blonde, and grey) prompted the Herderings to name them “The Metal Litter.” From left are Copper, Steelie, Goldie, and
Silver.

More here.

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>Northern's Fratz voted player of year

>By Chris Appel, Cumberland Times-News, Md.

May 27–ACCIDENT — Considering it’s been a decade and a half since the last time anyone in the area has accomplished what she has, it could be a long time before we come across another player like Kaitlynn Fratz.

After four years of scoring almost at will, Fratz’s high school career puts her in a neighborhood with few occupants. With her second consecutive selection as the Cumberland Times-News Area girls basketball Player of the Year, she joins Westmar’s Dawn Sloan (1990-92) and Jill McGowan (1995-97), and Bishop Walsh’s Lauren Zapf (1998-99) as the only players to win the award multiple times since its inception in 1990.

By being selected player of the year Fratz also puts herself on the Times-News All-Area First-Team for the fourth year, becoming just the second player (McGowan, 1994-97) to be voted first team all four seasons. The All-Area team is featured in today’s Sports Magazine.

Fratz can now lay claim to a barrel of records and milestones. She holds Northern High School records (girls and boys) with 221 career three-pointers, 284 career steals and the single-season scoring mark with 734 points. She also set school girls records with 305 career assists and most points in a single game, with 39. With 2,103 career points, Fratz is Garrett County’s all-time scoring leader.

More important, though, was that Fratz was able to help her team to a 23-5 record and a trip to the Maryland 1A State Finals. After sharing the Times-News Area Championship with Allegany last season, Fratz led the Huskies to their first ever outright championship.

“Kaitlynn is not a person who seeks personal recognition, but I really believe that she felt she had something to prove to herself,” said Northern Coach Steve Fratz. “Her number-one priority was to do whatever it took to bring Northern its first state championship, and any personal achievement would be what it would be.”

The possibility of joining such an elite group did not seem to put any more pressure on her shoulders. At least not any that anyone could see.

“Kaitlynn always felt that she could win — she wanted the ball in her hands when the game was on the line. Each game night tremendous pressure was on her shoulders, but you would never know it,” Coach Fratz said.

And it seemed when Kaitlynn was able to ignore the pressure, the rest of the team was able to follow suit.

“A look at her high school career demonstrated how well Kaitlynn excelled in the big games. Her confidence spilled over to her team and even to the coaches.”

At no time was that more important, or evident, than during Northern’s playoff run to the Maryland 1A finals. After scoring 15 points in an opening round win against Clear Spring, Fratz scored 24 in wins over Southern and Allegany, 25 in a region championship game win over Smithsburg and 28 against Mardela in a state semifinal.

“I would have to say Kaitlynn’s best performance of the season was the entire playoffs,” said Coach Fratz. “Her level of play was escalated so high that it took the entire focus of the opposing teams to try to stop her, leaving the door open for her teammates to excel.”

Kaitlynn finished her high school career by scoring 22 points in Northern’s 80-62 loss to Dunbar in the state championship game.

Barely challenged as an individual scorer, she led the area in scoring for the third straight season by averaging 26.2 points, and drained an area-best 86 three-pointers. A 73-percent foul shooter her senior season (158 for 216), Fratz was also among the area leaders in assists (3.0 per game) and steals (2.8).

Though already playing well enough to earn the area’s top award last season, Fratz still strived to improve her game through intangibles.

Coach Fratz noticed the difference in the way she commanded the floor.

“Game management was her best improvement. She initiated all of the offense, demonstrated patience and limited her emotions. She let the game come to her instead of pushing the envelope every time up the floor,” he said.

Fratz will be continuing her career at the University of Pitt-Johnstown, where she has accepted a full athletic scholarship to play basketball.

According to Coach Fratz, Kaitlynn is walking into a chance to make an early impact.

“UPJ lost their two leading scorers, with one of them being an All-American. Coach (Sasha) Palmer operates a lot out of two point guard looks, and she has made mention that she would like to have more scoring production from that position.”

The impact that Fratz had on the Northern basketball program will never be forgotten. Her No. 11 jersey was retired and will be prominently displayed in the lobby of the gymnasium.

Chris Appel is a reporter for the Times-News. Write to him at cappel@times-news.com

If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

877-563-5350 Questions about ANY listed property? I can help! Call me!
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>Huskies & Rams celebrate together

>

May. 12, 2011

A sense of “cross-county mutual admiration” was displayed by this group of Northern and Southern high school track and field athletes following Monday’s Garrett County Championship, which was hosted by the Northern Huskies. The NHS boys and the SHS girls won their respective team championships.

The Northern boys pictured are, kneeling, from left, Jeff Trautwein and Jordan Evans, and standing, from left, John Wilt, Alex Ruff, Cody Brenneman, Brody Fike, Chris Murdock, Adam Brenneman, Eric Maxim, and Bill Thatcher.

The Southern girls are, kneeling, Allie Friend and Ashley Gordon, and standing, Jordyn Livengood, Lindsey Smith, Summer Mossman, Claire Wilkinson, and Gina Stuck. See the sports link for more photos and details of the meet.

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If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

877-563-5350 Questions about ANY listed property? I can help! Call me!
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>Northern Huskies selected unanimous Area champions

>Finish year with 23-5 record, trip to Maryland Class 1A finals
Chris Appel
Cumberland Times-News The Cumberland Times-News Sat Apr 30, 2011, 11:41 PM EDT

ACCIDENT — Fifty games, 42 wins, one state runner-up, one conference championship and now a second Times-News Girls Basketball Area Championship. If someone would have told Northern High School Head Coach Steve Fratz two years ago that he would have done all of those things in just two seasons he may not have believed you.

But he wouldn’t have called you crazy.

Fratz saw the foundation for all of this success back when his seniors from this past season were in middle school.

“When the girls were in 6th grade we won the Tri-County 7th grade championship, and won again when they were in 8th grade,”  Fratz said.

“(Assistant Coach) Pete (Brosnihan) and I knew we had a special trio at that time, however, a lot of stuff could happen over the course of their high school careers.”

A lot of stuff did happen during their careers — mostly good. Their high school careers will also end on a high note as Northern was unanimously selected as the Cumberland Times-News Area champion by the four reporters of the Times-News Sports Department.

It’s not uncharted territory for the Huskies as they shared the spotlight last season with Allegany. This season Northern ended the Campers season with a 72-57 win in the Maryland 1A West Region Semifinals, giving the Huskies a 2-1 record in the three games the schools played.

The Campers, after two years as outright Area champs and a year sharing the title with Northern, finished second in the final poll. Frankfort pulled in third place, while Southern edged Mountain Ridge for fourth.

This season saw Northern get off to a rougher start than they hoped after it was looking at a 1-1 record following a loss to Keyser. It would be one of only two losses to local teams the Huskies would experience.

Aside from a 65-46 loss to Allegany during the teams’ first meeting, the only trouble that Northern would run into until the finals was in the form of University High School from Morgantown.

That trouble, according to Fratz, was a planned test for his team.

“The preparation for this year started last season when we dropped Union from our schedule and added road trips to Winters Mill and Musselman.

“We needed to face tougher competition to make us battle tested,” he said. “This season we dropped Salisbury for perennial powerhouse University just to let the girls see what it will take to compete down the road. We even changed our Holiday Tournament to South Hagerstown and stayed overnight so we could simulate how to prepare playing on consecutive nights.”

While making the schedule rougher, Fratz took a much softer approach with his players than he may have last season.

“I became more accepting of mistakes and miscues,” he said. “It is part of the game and instead of being upset and frustrated, even though it is tough at times, I tried to figure out how not to make the same mistake twice and to use it as teaching moments.”

Fratz also went with a more hands off approach in his teaching.

“I put more responsibility on the players for them to execute our offense and communicate to each other with defensive recognition, which in return, limited me ‘barking’ orders from the sideline. I had the luxury of having the best point guard in the area as she initiated the offense and every girl knew their responsibility and what was expected of them.”

Fratz’s daughter Kaitlynn, a senior, was the engine that ran his machine these past two seasons.

An incredible scorer, Kaitlynn not only was in a class of her own when it came to her scoring average this past season, but has scored more points than any other player, male or female, in the history of Garrett County basketball.

It would have been hard enough to deal with Northern if all teams had to do was deal with Kaitlynn, but the Huskies could throw another marksman at the opposition in Terra McKenzie. Despite missing her sophomore season because of a knee injury, McKenzie has given the Huskies two straight selections to the Appalachian Mountain Athletic Conference team.

Coach Fratz, whose only other senior player was Morgan Brosnihan, knew that it would be his seniors that would need to buy into his changes in order for the rest of the team to follow.

“After last year’s emotional defeat to Southern in the playoffs, I prepared differently whether it was practice or game strategies,” he said. “I still had confidence in our coaching philosophies, but more importantly I had confidence in our senior leaders. All three of the seniors bought into the idea that they cannot do the same old, same old to get where they dreamt about for the last five seasons.”

The dream started when Coach Fratz took his three seniors, then 8th graders, to watch Southern’s girls in the Maryland 1A Championship game.

It ended with an 80-62 loss to Dunbar in the state finals in this year’s 1A championship.

“We may have lost, but my favorite memory as a coach is the feeling I had watching the girls take the floor at the state championship,” Fratz said. “It gave me goose bumps thinking of how far we came and how we were living the dream.”

It was a dream the Huskies shared with the community that so rabidly supported them.

“I really believe the younger kids, including elementary age girls, got caught up in this special season. This team was like rock stars as young girls got giddy just to come up to talk to them. Entire elementary classes sent individual well wishes when we were headed to states, and youth players were ecstatic when they got one of the senior’s number on their team jersey.”

The excitement this season created may be what people remember of it years from now, but Fratz also hopes the girls are remembered for how they played as well as what they accomplished.

“We have been labeled overachievers. That may be, but I feel that with the work ethic that these girls had that anything was possible. The legacy that will be left behind will be that they played with heart, they played with passion and they never gave up.”

Chris Appel is a reporter for the Cumberland Times-News. Write to him at cappel@times-news.com

If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

877-563-5350 Questions about ANY listed property? I can help! Call me!
Visit the ‘I Love Deep Creek & Garrett County group’ on Facebook! News, events, photos, real
estate, community, info, more! 1,750+ members & growing!

>Huskies Recognized

>

The Garrett County commissioners on Tuesday recognized the Northern High School Girls’ Basketball Team, runner-up in the 2011 Maryland Class 1A State Championship. The commissioners presented the girls and their coaches with proclamations recognizing their achievement. Commission chair Gregan Crawford called the team a jewel in Garrett County’s crown. The Huskies had a 23–5 season.

Read the full article here.

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If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

877-563-5350 Questions about ANY listed property? I can help! Call me!
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>Win or lose, it was icing on the cake for Northern

>Mike Mathews
Cumberland Times-News The Cumberland Times-News Mon Mar 14, 2011, 08:01 AM EDT

— They knew what was coming but this time couldn’t stop it.

It was a pretty helpless feeling Saturday night for the Northern Huskies, whose history-making season ended in an 80-62 loss to Dunbar in the Class 1A girls basketball state championship game.

All year long the tough, talented but vertically-challenged Huskies found a way to make up for the only item lacking on their resume.

But Dunbar, with 5-foot-9 junior Michelle Wright and 6-foot-3 senior Oma-ah Tayong, was too tall an order.

The size of Wright (40 points, 21 rebounds) and Tayong (19 points, 15 rebounds) was one thing. Their strength and athleticism made the Poets (20-4) too much to handle, not just for Northern (23-5) but for just about everyone on their schedule. In the two state tournament games they combined for 100 points and 59 rebounds.

Wright’s 40-point game was the fifth-highest total in state tournament history, and eight points shy of the championship game record set by Loch Raven’s Janet Flora 35 years ago.

“Michelle Wright … she’s a stud, and plays so hard. We had no answer for her,’’ admitted Northern coach Steve Fratz. “And they throw in a 6-3 girl in there, too … it made it pretty difficult.”

The Poets took advantage of the mismatch all night, often lobbing passes over the Huskies defense for easy shots at the low post.

“We knew their high-low game was their bread and butter,’’ Fratz said. “Wright is so active and moves well without the ball. She’s very strong and a very good leaper.”

The Huskies pretty much matched the Poets in scoring (Dunbar, 21-18) and rebounding (Dunbar, 8-6) in the first quarter, but the Poets out-rebounded the Huskies 13-3 in the second quarter, and the numbers didn’t get any better in the second half.

“The big people we’ve played this year were not as athletic as the ones Dunbar had,’’ said Northern forward Morgan Brosnihan. “And they had more big people than we’re used to seeing.”

Still, the Huskies were well within striking distance at halftime, down by 42-33.

“We thought we could come back by playing hard, pushing and pressuring the ball, and boxing out’’ said guard Terra McKenzie. “That was the attitude at halftime.”

But it wasn’t to be. Dunbar ended up with a 50-21 edge in rebounds, and had 24 offensive rebounds to only five for Northern.

“We played a complete game … two halves of basketball,’’ said Dunbar coach Wardell Selby. “We had been playing only one half. We knew we wanted to get the ball inside and we kept pounding and pounding it inside. With the height we had, we thought we could wear them down.”

It comes so abruptly, the end of a season does, that it doesn’t seem fair. Only one of the 50 Class 1A teams wins its final game, and this year it was Dunbar.

Northern needed a perfect game Saturday, and nothing less. It didn’t happen.

The Huskies went the first 4:55 of the second half without a field goal, and two starters picked up their fourth fouls.

For the Huskies, one Fratz on the sideline is good. Two, not so good. But that was the case when Kaitlynn picked up her fifth foul with 7:12 to go. It was the first time she had fouled out all season.

“They play a high pressure defense, and our shots weren’t falling. Even our foul shots weren’t,” said Kaitlynn Fratz, whose 2,103 career points is a school and Garrett County record.

Northern, one of the top foul shooting teams in the area, shot 10-for-19 from the line over the first three quarters, and finished 18-for-31.

Fratz, McKenzie and Brosnihan, Northern’s seniors, helped lift the program to new heights during their careers.

“Since the sixth grade we’ve accomplished an awful lot,’’ said McKenzie. “From youth league championships to the AMAC … it’s been a great ride.”

It was more than just the Huskies that made the state tournament. Their vocal throng of fans didn’t disappoint, either.

“We beat Allegany, we beat Smithsburg, we beat tough teams and there is nothing much more you can ask for,” Kaitlynn Fratz said. “It’s been great. Our fans were great, even when we were getting beat by 20 they never stopped.”

“Our home games … You kind of got a taste of it by the crowd we had here. Our home games are crazy, and they were great experiences. It was an awesome trip and we had a great time. We fell a little short, but we are the second team in Northern history to do this so it feels pretty great.”

“When these girls were sixth graders we came here to see our county rival (Southern) win the state championship (in 2004). Ever since then, that’s been our goal,” Coach Fratz said of a championship.

The 23 wins were the most of any Northern basketball team, boys or girls. Kaitlynn Fratz finished No. 1 in career scoring, McKenzie is No. 2 in career three-point goals and Brosnihan No. 3 in career foul shooting.

“This is a record-setting squad and I could go on and on and on,’’ coach Fratz said. “To get here was icing on the cake, win or lose.”

Mike Mathews is a Cumberland Times-News sportswriter. Write to him at mmathews@times-news.com

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

>Huskies Going To States

>

In a dramatic come-from-behind win at Frederick Community College on Saturday, the Northern High School girls’ basketball team defeated Smithsburg, 52-47, to claim the West Region Championship. The team, seen here in jubilation just seconds after the final buzzer, celebrated by cutting down the net. The win places the Huskies among the final four teams in the state. The Northern squad begins State Tournament play tomorrow at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. Tip-off is set for 9 p.m. Photo by Bob Carney.

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Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

>Huskies hunting for first state title

>By Chris Appel, Cumberland Times-News, Md.
March 11–BALTIMORE — The calm before the storm has ended for the Northern girls basketball team, when after one of the more emotional weeks in program history the Lady Huskies resume their quest for their first ever Maryland state title when they take the court tonight at 9 p.m. to face Mardella in the Maryland 1A State Tournament semifinal at the University of Maryland-Baltimore County.

The Huskies (22-4) are coming off a week that saw them avenge a loss to Southern in the West Section semifinals on Tuesday, March 1, beat defending section champ Allegany on Thursday, March 3 and beat the reigning West Region champ Smithsburg on Saturday. They have now had five days off.

Mardella, which made it to the first round of last year’s state tournament before being bounced, beat Pocomoke 59-43 to repeat as as East Region champs.

“They are an extremely athletic team that likes to run up and down the floor,” said Northern head coach Steve Fratz. “They aren’t a big three-point shooting team, but they will shoot jump shots. And they are tough on the boards. They just crash down hard on every shot.”

The Warriors (25-1) have been rolling through competition this season, winning most of their games by a heavy margin. Fratz, whose Huskies have been involved in much closer contests during the playoffs, is hoping that fact has readied his team while leaving Mardella unprepared.

Northern’s playoffs began with an easy win over Clear Spring, but was followed by another Garrett County battle with Southern.

During the 2010 sectional quarterfinals, Northern, which had beat Southern the two times the teams played during the regular season, were upset by the Rams, 50-45. This year’s quarterfinals had the Huskies enter with two previous wins over the Rams, but this time they avoided the “trap” and rallied from a halftime deficit to win 52-44.

Kaitlynn Fratz scored 24 points, including the 2,000th of her career, and Terra McKenzie added 17 points and seven rebounds as the Huskies got their sixth win in the last eight meetings with the Rams.

Southern got out to a 24-19 lead after one half, but Northern matched the 19 points it scored in the first half with 19 more in the third quarter to lead 38-32 going into the fourth.

“We did not want to lose to Southern,” Fratz stated. “They embarrassed us last year during the same game, and I think because of how much we wanted to win we put some undo pressure on ourselves early on.”

The sectional final put the Huskies into a rubber match with the Campers after the teams spilt the pair of regular season contests. In what has been the best rivalry in the area the past couple of seasons, Northern raced out of the gates to take a 21-16 lead by the end of the first quarter, and extended its lead at halftime to 12 points (38-26).

The score was 53-40 early on in the fourth, but Allegany would get no closer than 57-50 with 3:38 remaining and the Huskies would win by the final of 72-57.

Fratz scored another 24 points, Morgan Brosnihan added 23 and Allison Yommer and Terra McKenzie combined to score another 20, to lead Northern to its first-ever win at Allegany.

“After beating Southern and getting the huge win against Allegany I was a little concerned about Smithsburg. Having gone through the games we just did and then having to travel to Frederick to play a tough team I was a little worried we’d be worn out.”

The first half against the Leopards show that Coach Fratz may have right. Northern shot just 8-for-26 during the first half, and trailed by as many as eight points in the first two quarters.

Things began to change when the Huskies started the third quarter on a 6-1 run to tie the score at 28, and kept it close for the remainder of the third.

McKenzie, who had been dealing with foul trouble, was huge for the Huskies in the fourth quarter, picking up Northern’s last 10 points of the game. She was 5-for-6 from the foul line down the stretch and finished with a total of 20 points.

Kaitlynn Fratz lead her team with 25 points.

This is the second time that a Northern team has advanced to the state tournament. The Huskies reached to the finals in 1997 before losing to Francis Scott Key 53-23.

Mardela is led by a trio of seniors: Aleshia Hoobs, Jasmine Jones and Taylor Siggers. The girls combined to score 48 of the Warriors’ 59 points in the win over Pocomoke. Siggers had 24 of them.

“They have some size on the inside with a 5-foot-11 girl who can also move well in the paint. Their best player is 5-10 and drives hard to the rim, pushes the ball on the fastbreak and likes to pull up on the baseline with a nice little jumper,” said Coach Fratz.

The coach does see areas where he thinks the Huskies can take advantage of match-ups.

“They can play an aggressive man-to-man defense if you are a good shooting team, but they don’t do it very often. If they want to pack it in with a zone and we can hit our shots we can do some damage. There could be a favorable pairing on some of their guards, too. Again, if we hit our shots early on it could open some chances to drive.”

As of Thursday night the Northern coach still wasn’t sure if any of it was actually happening tonight.

“I have to keep pinching myself. We took the three seniors (Kaitlynn Fratz, McKenzie and Brosnihan) down to see Southern in the state tournament when the girls were in sixth grade, and it’s been their dream ever since then to play there. To know we’ll be there on that same court six years later… It just doesn’t seem real.”

It all becomes real tonight at 9 p.m.

Chris is a reporter for the Cumberland Times-News. Write to him at cappel@times-news.com

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!