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Morgan City hosts Livonia with eye on playoff run

When Te r e n c e McCutcheon put his name in for the Morgan City High School boys basketball position, he said he really had no idea what type of talent he was about to encounter.
Instead, McCutcheon, who came to Morgan City from Kaplan High School, was looking to get closer to the source of what brought him to Louisiana from Alabama, his college playing days at Nicholls State. He figured the closer he was to the Thibodaux area, the more likely his name would be recognized.
After applying for the job, he soon learned the potential of the Morgan City High School team this season and said he passed a few other jobs, fortunately being rewarded with the Morgan City head coaching position.
Now, after one season at the helm of Morgan City in which the Tigers have recorded multiple impressive victories in a b r u t a l s c h e d u l e , McCutcheon will lead the Tigers into the Class 4A bi-district round of the playoffs Friday when No. 9 Morgan City (24-6) hosts No. 24 Livonia at 7 p.m.
While Morgan City faced a brutal non-district schedule with games against such opponents as Breaux Bridge, Northside, Westgate, Dunham, Lafayette Christian and Madison Prep, McCutcheon wasn’t
familiar with all of the teams, so at first glance, he didn’t see the schedule as a tough one.
“Once, we got into the games and started playing, to make it through clean with no injuries, that’s always a blessing, especially with the way we play,” McCutcheon said. “We try to play tough, fast-paced, and a lot of times moving around like that, you come out with some injuries.”
The Tigers, who won a share of the District 7-4A title with a 5-1 mark, successfully navigated the schedule, including its most impressive win to date, a 56-52 win against Class 3A’s top-ranked team, Madison Prep, in its season finale.
McCutcheon said Morgan City really showed its potential in New Iberia’s tournament after losses to Breaux Bridge and Northside.
“I saw us turn the corner in two losses, rather than two wins,” McCutcheon said, explaining he felt that way because they accomplished some things, particularly their style of play.
With the schedule Morgan City has endured and the wins it has, coupled with the players’ playoff experience from a season ago, McCutcheon said he is confident entering the postseason.
“The main thing that I want my guys to do entering the playoffs is just to believe in themselves and understand to be aggressive,” he said. “We earned this. We don’t have any reason to come in timid or feeling like we can’t win because we’ve beat some very good teams. I think our resume speaks for itself, and at this point, it’s just being confident and going out there and playing with the effort that we need.”
Morgan City’s first-round opponent, Livonia, competed in a tough 4A district with St. Martinville, Breaux Bridge, Cecilia and Beau Chene and Opelousas and finished in a three-way tie for fourth place
in league play with a 4-6 mark.
The Wildcats, the No. 24 seed, were 19-8 overall in the regular season.
McCutcheon said Livonia was one of the teams he had his eye on during the season as a possible playoff opponent for Morgan City.
“I think we have a really good chance,” McCutcheon said. “Sizewise, I think they matchup with us for the most part, but I think my guard play is going to be stronger.”

Patterson looking to 'bounce back' in playoff opener

After Patterson dropped a game earlier this season against Brusly in Brusly, tournament, Patterson boys basketball coach Ryan Taylor told his squad how since he’s been here, his teams have usually rebounded strong from losses. This year’s Patterson squad, which features just one senior in Kamiah Jones, has adopted the rallying cry of “bounce back” when it breaks the huddle after a loss since hearing the story from Taylor. Bouncing back is something that the No. 12 seed Lumberjacks will need to do Friday when it opens postseason play against No. 21 Glen Oaks in Patterson at 7 p.m. “The difference is, on those ...

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Bowling report

PROGRESSIVE BOWLING LEAGUE Feb. 20 – Week 17 W L Putt’s Honk Tonk 40 28 Rolling Stoned 3½ 29½ Wild Ones 37½ 26½ Gutter Cleaners 33 35 Bowling Stones 29½ 38½ High scratch series and game of 997 and 380 were bowled by Putt’s Honky Tonk. High handicap series and game of 1277 and 474 was bowled by Wild Ones. High scratch bowlers were Angela Fields 530 (201, 168, 161), Beverly Mayon 517 (211,

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MCHS opens Tri-City Baseball Classic with 8-3 win

Morgan City High School improved to 2-0 this season with an 8-3 win against Westgate High School Thursday in opening-day action at the fourth annual Tri-City Baseball Classic. Morgan City, led by first-year Coach Joel Daigle, never trailed, taking a 4-0 lead in the bottom of the third and extending its lead to 5-0 in the bottom of the fifth. Westgate scored a run in the top of the sixth, but Morgan City countered with three runs in the bottom of the sixth for an 8-1 lead. Westgate scored two runs in the top of the seventh. Mitchell Mancuso earned the win. In ...

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Session edges toward failure as sales tax gets blocked

BATON ROUGE (AP) — Louisiana’s budget-balancing special session edged toward failure Sunday night, as the House again refused to pass a sales tax bill that is considered the linchpin of any tax deal to help close a looming budget gap.
The vote seemed to suggest the special session likely won’t raise any money as it neared the Wednesday deadline set by Gov. John Bel Edwards for the 17-day gathering to end.
“I don’t see any salvagability of this session. I don’t see much hope. I hope I’m wrong,” said Rep. Rob Shadoin, a Ruston Republican who supports taxes to offset the budget hole.
Factions in the House and Gov. John Bel Edwards appear unable reach agreement on which tax types — and how much money — to use to offset the $994 million shortfall that hits July 1. House Republican leaders favor sales taxes, while Democrats, particularly the Black Caucus, prefer income taxes.
But even when the factions seem willing to support a tax measure, the deals have broken down over ties to unrelated bills and the order in which bills are heard.
Mistrust marks the debates, and frustration is brimming in the chamber.
“I don’t see how we move forward at this point. Emotions have been high. There’s been a lot of contention in this session because there are a lot of members who feel like they’ve been left out of this discussion, and I don’t see us moving forward,” said Rep. Jack McFarland, a Winnfield Republican. “I think this is it. I think we go home.”
Only 33 of 104 representatives supported the sales tax proposal in a Sunday night vote, down from 38 votes when the measure failed a few days earlier. It needed 70 votes to pass. A mix of Republicans and Democrats voted on both sides of the issue.
“In my opinion, that vote just sealed the failure of doing anything beneficial for our people,” said Shadoin, who supported the bill.
After that vote, the House adjourned until Monday. Republican House Speaker Taylor Barras said he wasn’t sure if lawmakers would simply end the session when they returned.
“I don’t know that for sure,” he said.
Edwards, a Democrat, posted on Twitter that he believes “the House has given up any effort to solve the fiscal cliff.” He said the House Republican leadership “did not negotiate in good faith.”
Republicans in the chamber, however, have said instead the Democrats kept changing their demands in the negotiations.
Barras pointed to four members of the Black Caucus voting against a major tax bill that failed Friday, a proposal sought by Democrats to lessen the itemized deductions allowed for upper-income taxpayers. The Black Caucus members said they were unhappy it was tied to separate bills including efforts to enact work requirements on Medicaid patients. But Barras said those ties were need to keep enough Republican support for the measure.
The $994 million budget shortfall is tied to the expiration of temporary taxes.
Part of the shortfall will be offset with $302 million estimated from increased state income-tax collections caused by federal tax changes, leaving a hole of $692 million.
Sunday’s debate was on a proposal sponsored by Rep. Stephen Dwight, a Lake Charles Republican, that would temporarily renew one quarter of an expiring 1 percent sales tax and temporarily eliminate some sales tax breaks, to raise $290 million annually.
Because most tax bills must start in the House, senators have had little to do — but wait. Republican Senate President John Alario said he remained hopeful the House could broker a deal on some taxes, though he added “that hope is beginning to diminish.”
“It’s not heading in the right direction,” Alario said.
The session costs an estimated $50,000 to $60,000 a day.

MAXINE BOYNE EVANOFF

Maxine Boyne Evanoff, 86, a resident of Bayou Vista, died Thursday, March 1, 2018, at Teche Regional Medical Center.
She donated her body to science for medical education.
A time of reflection will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Fairview Cinema in Bayou Vista.

NHIROBI DEWEY

Nhirobi Dewey, 21, a resident of Morgan City, died Friday, March 2, 2018, in Morgan City.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete at this time.

Wheel House for March 5

EGG HUNT
Family Affair sixth annual Easter Egg Hunt, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday, March 31, Cherry Street Park, Patterson. Egg hunt at 2 p.m. Features free food, games, egg hunt and prizes. Donations accepted toward the event, call Sandra Grogan, 985-297-4145 or Allise Jennings, 985-714-1070.

Ribbon-cutting for Bayou Vista business

The Daily Review/Zachary Fitzgerald
The St. Mary Chamber of Commerce held a ribbon-cutting Thursday for Roses Express, located at 853 U.S. 90 East in Bayou Vista. The store sells a variety of different items. Tammy Keaton is store manager.

Central Catholic run-rules Patterson, 11-1, in softball

The Central Catholic Lady Eagles run-ruled Patterson 11-1 in six innings Thursday at Patterson. Central Catholic scored three runs each in the first two innings, added a run in the third, two in the fourth and two in the sixth for an 11-0 lead. Patterson scored a run in the bottom of the sixth inning but could get no more to keep the mercy rule from going into effect. Central Catholic outhit Patterson 12-4. Bailee Lipari led Central Catholic with a 3-for-4 performance with an RBI, two stolen bases and three runs. Other top Central Catholic offensive contributors were Thomas, 2-for-4, two doubles and ...

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