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Ocolly.com August 31, 2015 THE O’COLLY Proud and immortal S on of former OSU basketball player forced to sell father’s treasured championship heirloom to pay for medical bills.

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O c o l l y . c o mAu g u st 3 1 , 2 0 1 5

T H E O ’ C O L L Y

Proud and immortal

Son of former OSU basketball player forced to sell father’s treasured championship

heirloom to pay for medical bills.

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 2

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title trinket a reminder to former osu basketball player’s Son

Seventy years ago, 17 men from a land-grant college in Stillwater pre-sented themselves to the basketball world as nation-al champions.

Among the men who walked off of the famed court of New York City’s Madison Square Garden was Richard Caldwell, a lanky three-year player from a small mining town in southeastern Okla-homa.

He would play only one year for coach Henry Iba, but he was given a pendant-sized golden basketball with his name engraved alongside his college’s that would stay

with him his entire life. Richard left basketball to

start a career as a pipe set-ter to support his family. The gold basketball was placed in a jewelry box.

He died in 1987, but his son, Rick, inherited the treasured ball.

But years of playing mi-nor league baseball for the Kansas City Royals took its toll on Rick’s body. With seven elbow surgeries last year and a neck surgery to be scheduled, the sport has taken a monetary toll, too.

Rick, 60, is being forced to sell the cherished relic to pay for his medical bills.

“It’s sad to be losing it,” Rick said.

‘A HELL OF A GUY’Rick grew up hearing

stories from his dad about the 1945 season and on rare occasions, Richard would go upstairs and bring down a small black velvet box.

“I saw the basketball maybe six times in my

life,” Rick said. “It was al-ways upstairs in the house. He never put it in a safety deposit box or anything.

“He hardly showed it, but when he did, he used gloves to show it.”

Rick can’t help but to reminisce about his dad when he’s talking about the basketball.

He wants people to not only be able to hold a piece of OSU history, but to also know who his dad was to him.

About 92 miles east of Ada, nestled just south of Robbers Cave State Park was where Richard set school records for Wilbur-ton High School.

Clyde Wooldridge, spokesman for the WHS Athletic association, said Richard’s play was some-thing special.

“He set the all-time school record for most points in a game with 49 points in January 1941,” Wooldridge said. “And 49

Story continues on page 3

J o r d a n B i s h o p

@ J o r d a n b i s h o p 3 5

Sports Reporter

1945 Redskin YearbookRichard Caldwell (middle) left Aggie basketball after a year to start a career as a pipe setter.

sports I Championship relic from 1945 Cowboy basketball season up for sale.

Courtesy of rick caldwellRichard Caldwell played basketball at OSU for only one year, but he treasured the small golden basketball.

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 3

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Continued from page 2

points in 1941 would be like 99 points today.”

After he graduated, Richard stayed home and played at Eastern Okla-homa State College before Iba came knocking. The future hall of fame coach had tried to recruit the forward for quite some time before Richard fi-nally accepted.

At 22, married to his high school sweetheart, Mary, with a baby on the way, he left his hometown for good.

“He took it on a whim because he wanted to play for Hank Iba because Iba was one of the best coach-es ever,” Rick said.

A family man, Richard left basketball after the 1945 season to start his career as a pipe setter and in 1948, he and his fam-ily moved to Oak Lawn, Illinois.

Over the years in Oak Lawn, Richard never forgot the game he loved and was always ready for a pick-up game in the neighborhood.

“My dad back in the day used to take seniors from my high school team and he would play basketball with them at the house.” Rick said. “He had a fall away hook shot that there were guys that were 6-foot-5 that couldn’t block it. Eight times out of 10 that basketball was going in the hoop, and this was when he was 50 years old.”

FINDING VALUE On a whim last summer,

Rick took the ball with him to the nationally syndi-cated show “A Piece of the Game” in Chicago to see how much it was worth. To his surprise, Don Dupree, the show’s appraiser, evaluated the basketball to be worth about $8,000. Afterward, Rick decided he would put it up for sale in Stillwater.

“I just think it’s cool,” Rick said. “It’s like a be-fore and after with the col-lege name. Also, it’s from the first year where they won two (NCAA champion-ships) in a row.”

In 1945, Oklahoma State, then known as Oklahoma A&M, set records in almost every category. They beat

opponents by an average of 20 ½ points behind the strength of star Bob Kur-land. Finishing the year 27-4, the Aggies won their first title against home-town favorite New York University 49-45.

Gold items like the ball usually are appraised for much lower, but because of the historical signifi-cance of the ball, the price skyrockets.

Amy Pitchford, who helped start Stillwater An-tique and Collector’s Mall, said when a piece such as the ball comes up for sale, there’s a niche market for it.

“We have a few local col-lectors who will pay the big bucks for rare pieces like that,” Pitchford said.

When Richard died at 64 he and his son were im-mensely close.

And although Richard is gone, Rick likes to think that his father won’t be for-gotten as long as the small golden basketball with the words “Richard Caldwell,” “Oklahoma A&M” and “1945 Champions” etched in the metal has a place in the world.

“He was my best friend in the whole world,” Rick said. “He was a hell of a guy, really someone to look up to.”

To inquire about the 1945 gold basketball, email Rick Caldwell at [email protected].

[email protected]

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 4

Just off of the south side of University Street, there are as many hard hats and construction equipment as you’ll find on campus.

Members of Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Kappa Alpha are preparing and drawing plans for the construction of their new homes.

Phi Gamma Delta, com-monly referred to as Fiji, began the demolition of its former house on 1123 W. University Ave. in the beginning of August.

Plans are underway for the creation of Fiji’s $4 million home.

The timeframe for the project’s completion isn’t long, said Grant Newton, Fiji’s external communica-

Fraternities adding 2 houses to Greek Row

A l l i s o n S m i t h

@ a l l i s o n _ s m i t h 4 1

Staff Reporter

tion executive.“We are building a new

(house) in the same loca-tion as the current house,” Newton said. “The time-frame is set for the house to be finished before the end of the year in 2016.”

In-house members of the fraternity moved out in May and are living in the Phi Delta Theta house in the 200 block of South Monroe.

“Our house held about 64 members, and the new house should hold up to 70,” Newton said. “The goal of the new house was to modernize, strengthen and create more space for about the same number of members that we currently hold.”

Fiji is not the only frater-nity adding a new house to Greek Row.

Pi Kappa Alpha is pre-paring to break ground for its new house on the corner of University and Monroe streets.

Hornbeek Blatt Archi-tects, based in Edmond, partnered with Pi Kappa Alpha to design the new home.

Anthony Blatt, a Horn-beek Blatt Architects team member, estimated it will take 12-14 months to build the Jeffersonian-style home, designed to match the rest of the buildings on the OSU campus.

The cost of construction is still being determined.

Pi Kappa Alpha mem-bers are living in their current house until the new home is built. The Baptist Collegiate Ministry build-ing was demolished Aug. 18 to make way for the fraternity’s new home. Pi Kappa Alpha will hold a ground breaking ceremony Sept. 12 and start construc-tion a few days later, said

Shane Pate II, Alumni Advisory Board chairman for the Pikes at OSU.

Pate said the fraternity sold its existing house to OSU in May.

“The Pikes will continue to lease the house from OSU until the new house is complete,” Pate said. “We don’t know what OSU plans on doing with the current house, but look forward to seeing how OSU best makes use of the property.”

Pate said a small group of Pike alumni started the conversation about housing renovations.

“Greek housing at OSU is going through a renais-

sance of sorts, and we felt that we needed to become a part of the movement to re-main competitive,” he said. “However, once we started talking to our alumni and realized the potential for donor support, we shifted our focus on building a completely new structure in a better location on campus.”

Pate said the Pike’s cur-rent house was last reno-vated in 2008 when new flooring was installed along with updated bathrooms.

The new 32,000-square-foot home will include an indoor basketball court, conference rooms and a new chapter room, Pate

said. The bedrooms will be suites.

The fraternity’s existing house will be renovated into the J. Louie Sanderson Memorial House, accord-ing to the Pi Kappa Al-pha’s recent social network posts.

“We are very excited and proud of the new house be-ing built,” Pate said. “This structure will define Pi Kappa Alpha for the next century, attracting schol-ars, athletes and gentlemen that will aspire to do great things for PiKA, OSU and their communities upon graduation.”

Kayla Hodgin/O’COLLYIn-house Phi Gamma Delta members moved out of their former house in May and are temporarily living in the Phi Delta Theta house. Phi Gamma Delta’s new home will hold up to 70 members and be built in the same location as the old house.

[email protected]

Courtesy of Grant Newton

Phi Gama Delta will have a new $4 million home by the end of 2016. Its old house was demolished in August.

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 5

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SGA Pres. Hilbert: We want to be the voice of students

After Student Govern-ment Association’s spring semester of campaign and election controversy, President Kyle Hilbert is on a mission to unify the organization.

But he also has a bigger goal for SGA, and that’s to be the voice of the students.

As president of SGA, Hilbert enters a list of distinguished alumni encompassing 100 years of student government at Oklahoma State. The title carries responsibility, but also offers a chance at a lasting legacy for students.

SGA kicked off the semester with the largest Lights on Stillwater in his-tory. Vice President Taylor Dennis coordinated the event.

Hilbert said the event was improved and less crowded despite its larger size.

“That event ended up being a resounding suc-cess,” Hilbert said. “We’d had more booths than we’d ever had sign up with over

200. We also spread it out as compared with previous years. In previous years, there were three rows of tables, and this year we only had two and ran it longer down Hall of Fame, which I thought was really good and a whole lot less congested.”

This weekend, Hilbert and other members of SGA’s three branches of student government went to Camp Redlands outside of Stillwater for the semester retreat.

The goal of the retreat at the beginning of each semester is to brief newer members on bylaws and procedures and to promote teamwork within the orga-nization.

Hilbert said the event is an opportunity for SGA to lay out its vision and agenda for big issues this fall, particularly with the graduation of many promi-nent SGA senators such as Senate Chair Clint Duncan and Vice Chair Allison Slagell.

In part due to gradu-ations, several positions in both the executive and judicial branch still need to be filled, something Hilbert said is a big part of this fall’s objectives for the organization.

Above all, Hilbert said SGA wants to improve its communication with students and work harder to represent everyone on campus.

“We’ve got to do a good job of explaining to students that we’re here to help,” Hilbert said. “We’re

here to be the voice of students.”

Courtesy of Kyle Hilbert

SGA President Kyle Hilbert aims to unify SGA and improve communication with students.

[email protected]

S t e t s o n P a y n e

@ s t e t s o n _ _ P ay n e

Staff Writer

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 6

Runners of all ages poured into Stillwater on Saturday to partici-pate in the second annual Color Splash Dash 5k and fun run.

Families and members of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation organized the Splash Dash to raise money to help find a cure for cystic fibrosis. Cystic fibrosis causes the body to produce an excess amount of mucus in the lungs, which causes victims to be prone to sickness and have dif-ficulty breathing.

Ronda Meyers, grandmother to Aden Hall, a 2-year-old living with the disease, and her team of planners have been working on the event since last year’s race in November.

“We are so excited to see how much the race has already grown,” Meyers said.

Exceeding its goal of 200 par-ticipants, the Splash Dash raised more than $10,000 toward finding a cure for cystic fibrosis, Meyers said.

“We had double the turnout this year from last year,” said Ashley Hall, Aden’s mother. “It’s wonder-ful.”

Denis Hotson, 34, brought his son, Gunar, 6, to participate in the Splash Dash.

“Gunar did a color run last year, and he loved running through the powder,” Hotson said. “He got so pumped when I told him that there would be a race here in Stillwa-ter.”

Participants received a T-shirt

and their own color packet to throw around.

Each color station throughout the race consisted of volunteers throwing color packets at runners and spraying them with water soakers full of dye.

Opening registration to runners on the day of the race allowed the organizers to raise an extra $2,000, Meyers said.

Among the participants were three families with children living with cystic fibrosis.

“We are adding tomorrows for these kids out here today,” Meyers said.

The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation puts on multiple events throughout the year in efforts to raise money for research, Meyers said.

Kelsey Sistrunk, a Cystic Fibro-sis Foundation member, worked in collaboration with Meyers.

“It’s great to know that all of this money goes right to medical research,” Sistrunk said. “They are so close to finding a cure.”

The Color Splash Dash had 15 sponsors this year, along with local volunteers, who helped with the color stations, which included the powder bomb station at the finish line.

Oklahoma State sophomore Willis Cook and junior Martin Gamarra, both members of the Delta Chi fraternity, were among the volunteers.

Cook and Gamarra passed out water bottles and sprayed runners with dyed water towards the last leg of the race.

“We love to represent Oklahoma State whenever we can,” Cook said. “It’s so cool to see everyone out here for a good cause.”

Meyers said she hopes even more people will sign up for next year.

“I will keep doing things like this until they find a cure,” Meyers said. “I’m hopeful for the future.”

[email protected]

Splash Dash 5k brings color to Stillwater

C a r l i e H a s t y

@ o c o l ly

Staff writer

Jacquie Cheatham/O’COLLYAden Hall, a 2-year-old living with cystic fibrosis, participated in the the Color Splash Dash, which helps raise money for cystic fibrosis research. This year’s event raised more than $10,000.

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 7

color splash dash 5k

The Color Splash Dash 5k had more than 200 participants who raised more than $10,000 for cystic fibrosis research on Saturday.

Zack Furman/O’COLLY

The second annual Splash Dask 5k and fun run, which took place at Boomer Lake, partnered with the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to raise money for cystic fibrosis research.

Colored powder was thrown on participants while they ran through the path at Boomer Lake on Satuday.

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 8

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FROMONLY

Under the sweltering Oklahoma sun, no one was hotter Sunday afternoon than Holly Brehmer.

Oklahoma State soccer returned to form on Sunday, dismantling the Georgia Bulldogs 4-0. The Cow-girls (2-1) were clinical in the second half after the Sooners embarrassed them 2-0 on Friday, while the Bulldogs (0-3-1) wilted in the heat.

Brehmer, a walk-on from Eagle River, Alaska, opened the scoring in the 44th minute after UGA goalie Louise Hogrell fumbled a deep cross in the center of the box. Brehmer connected with her right foot and forced a shot up and into the top right corner of the net for her second career goal.

Alaskan walk-on brehmer saves the weekend for Cowgirls“Holly’s goal was huge,”

OSU coach Colin Carmi-chael said. “It got us going, and without it, the second half probably would have been a lot more difficult.”

It was only the begin-ning for the Bulldogs and Brehmer.

The Cowgirls put on a clinic in the second half. The chances that eluded them in the first 43 minutes were converted into goals in the last half. Brehmer scored again on one of those second half chances for her second goal of the game and third in her career.

Yet again, Brehmer found herself the beneficiary off a rebound as Anna Beffer raced down the field and fired a shot at Hogrell’s legs that ricocheted to her right, finding Brehmer, who was trailing the play and shot for the empty-net goal. It was a special day for the walk-on.

“I definitely hoped a day like today would come, so I’ve been working hard for it,” Brehmer said. “I didn’t expect it, but I’m really excited.”

Although Brehmer wasn’t the only Cowgirl to score on the afternoon, with two world-class finishes from

Marlo Zoller and Courtney Dike, Brehmer was the big-gest star.

It was a complete 180-degree turn from Friday night’s Bedlam defeat.

“We always nitpick, and we’re looking for nega-tives,” Carmichael said. “I can’t find any. The team did great. … We talked about our physicality. We changed that completely. We tweaked our system slightly for a couple of bigger, stronger kids in the midfield. I think that helped. … Nothing negative to say.”

It was a magical day at the Cowgirl Soccer Com-plex. A walk-on from Eagle River, Alaska, scored twice. A highly touted freshman in Zoller scored her first regu-lar season goal on a 30-yard curler into the top left corner of the net, and Dike — the program’s poster child — scored her first goal of the year after controlling a cross in the box off her chest and volleying it top shelf on an 180-degree scissor kick.

The Cowgirls may have haltered out of the gate, but they appear to be on their way.

Jacquie Cheatham/O’COLLYHolly Brehmer celebrates with her teammates after the first of her two goals Sunday. Brehmer leads the Cowgirls with three goals this season.

H a y d e n B a r b e r

@ h k _ b a r b e r

Sports Reporter

[email protected]

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 9

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MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 10

Horoscope

Daily HoroscopeBy Nancy BlackTribune Content AgencyToday’s Birthday (08/31/15). Rise into your own this year. Use your influence for a greater cause, especially after 10/13. Your natural precision grows family accounts after 10/27. Discover a kindred spirit and partner after 3/8. Forgiveness creates breakthroughs after 3/23. Share your love.To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.Aries (March 21-April 19) -- Today is a 9 -- You’re getting stronger today and tomorrow, and more confident. Assert your wishes without stepping on anyone. Reassess your assets. Another source of revenue is possible. Stay out of somebody else’s argument. Tackle big goals, and get support.Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Finish up tasks today and tomorrow. It’s emotion versus reason. Take time for ritual and peaceful meditation. Public obligations could interfere with private time. New possibilities stretch old boundaries. Focus on keeping old commitments before making new.Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Friends pry you from your comfortable shell over the next two days. Community bonds and projects call you to action. Go for having it all (as long as you get a full night’s sleep). Share resources and inspiration.Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Focus, take on increased responsibility and earn a professional boost over the next few days. Career advancement is distinctly possible. Make decisions. Give up what you don’t need. Balance accounts. Someone influential is paying attention.Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Get into an expansion phase today and tomorrow. You’d rather play than work. Business travel serves as a compromise. Avoid arguments by minimizing expense. Review all options and plan moves meticulously. Dream big. Listen for what’s wanted.Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Strategically manage finances over the next two days. Pay old debts before incurring new. Study ways to make and keep money. Negotiate contracts and file papers. Postpone an outing until done. Avoid bickering by keeping careful track.Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Your partner can be a big help over the next few days. Hold meetings to resolve priorities, or waste time with upsets and misunderstandings. Resolve a financial issue. Be receptive, and offer support. Take care of each other.Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 9 -- Focus on your work for the next two days. Your pursuit of excellence is paying off. Learn from a master. Keep up with correspondence and communications. Keep your fingers on the pulse of your industry.Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- Play with someone attractive today and tomorrow. Rearrange your schedule to include more fun. Don’t discuss money. Listen carefully, to avoid a communi-cations breakdown. Follow emotions as well as intellect. Distractions cause mistakes. Focus on love.Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is a 7 -- Walk and talk with your partner. Attend to household matters today and tomorrow. It could get busy ... work from home. Family comes first. A private conference spells out the facts. Disagree persuasively. Rely on your schedule.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is an 8 -- Update your skills over the next few days. Study with a talented teacher. Get expert assistance. Follow rules carefully. Avoid another’s controversy. Tie up loose ends, and take a break. The competition is smart. Be here now.Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is a 9 -- The next two days are good for business, which is lucky as bills come due. Your ideas are attracting attention. Prepare marketing and promotional materials. Share a juicy invitation. Publish after approvals by all involved. Hit “send.”

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Errors of fact reported to the editor-in-chief will be corrected promptly. Please direct all concerns to the editor-in-chief at 744-6365 or [email protected].

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The views offered by The O’Colly employees are not necessarily those of the university administration or Oklahoma State University Board of Regents. Columns are the opinion of the author. Columns and letters to the editor do not necessarily reflect the views of the edito-rial board or The O’Colly.

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SOLUTION TO SATURDAY’S PUZZLE

Complete the gridso each row, column and 3-by-3 box(in bold borders)contains everydigit, 1 to 9. For strategies onhow to solveSudoku, visitwww.sudoku.org.uk

© 2015 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.

8/31/15

Level: 1 2 3 4

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 11

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE AUGUST 31, 2015

ACROSS1 Tiny insect5 Road trip stop

10 Zipped14 Indigo dye source15 Solo16 Fillable bread17 *Sentry19 Apple tablet20 City with Heat

and Hurricanes21 Copter’s

forerunner22 Strike from the

text23 Gulf War

journalist Peter25 Invented, as a

word27 Light on the

Vegas strip29 Made a boo-boo32 Grocery box amt.35 Electrician on a

film set39 Academic URL

suffix40 Sushi tuna41 Caboose locale

... and a hint towhat the firstword of theanswers tostarred clues canbe

42 Wolfed down43 Transgress44 Staten or

Manhattan45 License-issuing

agcys.46 Tennis great

Agassi48 Info50 Show with

clowns54 Skype need58 “Come Fly With

Me” lyricistSammy

60 Poker stake62 Spaghetti topper63 Copies are made

from one: Abbr.64 *Crafty press

agent66 Street artist in a

striped shirt,stereotypically

67 Mombasa’scountry

68 Penn Sta.-to-Suffolk Countytrain system

69 Tapped brew70 Golf’s Slammin’

Sammy71 __, meeny ...

DOWN1 Molten rock2 “... bombs

bursting __”3 Business big shot4 Periodic table

item5 West of “My Little

Chickadee”6 Couturier Cassini7 Subject matter8 Warm month in

Chile9 “Vive __!”: “Long

live the king!”10 Kiddie-lit’s

Charlotte, e.g.11 *Wishful thinking12 And others, in

Lat.13 20-Across’ former

county18 Toy on a string24 Frat party robes26 Unhip sort28 Finger or toe part30 1999 Ron

Howard satire31 Association fees32 Astronaut’s org.

33 Like wafers34 *Music-maker

activated by abreeze

36 St. Augustine’sstate: Abbr.

37 Ward (off)38 Provide with

funds41 Tall-cake layer45 Complete failure47 Pro pretending to

be an amateur

49 Tijuana money51 Winery

containers52 Set free, as pigs53 “Goosebumps”

author R.L.55 Term of affection56 Nut under an oak57 “__ Christmas!”58 Hair-parting tool59 Singer India.__61 Irish folk singer65 Family guy

Saturday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Janice Luttrell 8/31/15

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 8/31/15

Team effort earns Cowgirls a bounce-back win

Eleven players made it on the pitch for the Cow-girls, not including the 11 that started.

The Cowgirl starters were sent in to tire the Bulldogs before the Okla-homa State reserves came in and finished Georgia off for a 4-0 win.

“We also rotated a lot,” OSU soccer oach Colin Carmichael said. “We were trying to save some fresh legs, especially up front, and we wanted to wear them down and I think that happened. …

“Courtney (Dike) is still not quite 100 percent so we’re very mindful of that. We told Courtney, Haley (Woodard) and those guys ‘run them, run them, run them’ and we’ll get Holly (Brehmer), we’ll get Mad-die (Mercado), we’ll get Anna (Beffer) and Beryl (Smith), we’ll start rotat-ing and I think you saw it, they wore down.”

The Cowgirls (2-1) ramped up the aggres-sion and stayed on the attack, unlike in Friday’s 2-0 loss to Oklahoma. OSU dominated posses-sion throughout the game against Georgia (0-3-1) thanks to the fresh players constantly putting pressure on the Bulldogs.

The first two Cowgirl goals came from tap-ins by Brehmer, who added her second and third goals of the young season.

With five minutes left in the first half, Smith came off the bench and flicked a header that looked des-tined for the back of the net before a diving save from Bulldog goalkeeper Louise Hogrell.

Only two OSU starters, Lana Duke and Christina Jean-Charles, were called upon to play the full 90

minutes. Beffer and Mer-cado got the most minutes of the substitutes with 37 and 44, respectively, and all of the players who were subbed on played at least 11 minutes.

“The reserve players, we challenged them to step into new roles and give us some minutes off the bench,” Carmichael said. “They were awe-some.”

The Cowgirls will need their reserves to keep up the good work with two tough games coming up next weekend when they travel to No. 14 Florida and UCF.

“Those reserve kids deserve a ton of praise today,” Carmichael said. “They made the difference in my opinion.”

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M a r s h a l l S c o t t

@ M a r s h a l l _ O n c e

Sports Reporter

Jacquie Cheatham/O’COLLYAfter returning from a hamstring injury on Friday, Court-ney Dike (left) scored her first goal of the season Sunday.

MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 12