Looking back at the year in sports for 2012

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Sadly, this look-back column from your local sports guy is once again laden with sadness and sorrow for 2012.

The death of Hall High School football player Daniel Lule during the first day of practice for the 2012 football season was most tragic. I can’t imagine the grief and loss his family has endured.

The way the Hall football and school community, along with many other area schools, including the LaSalle-Peru football team, rallied around the Lule family was most touching. I’m sure the Lule family found their loss was shared by many.

Also sadly missed: Brett Shepard (my former Little Leaguer), Tim Alter (one of the first Princeton Youth Soccer coaches), Tony Pease (former PHS football statistician, my dear friend), Brandon Putts (Special Olympics athlete), Mel Hult (Princeton Youth Baseball and Football, longtime Princeton/Bureau County Fair booster), Leroy Wirth (former owner of Hidden Lake Country Club), Betsy Morgan (cook/friend at Princeton Hunt and Game Club) and Father Kevin Gorman (longtime St. Bede Academy athletic director).

Notable national sports figures lost include catcher Gary Carter, Penn State coach Joe Paterno and footballer Junior Seau.

Feel-good stories: Hard for a better feel-good story than that of Connor Alter’s story. The Logan seventh-grader nearly lost his foot in an Easter Sunday accident, his parents signing off for amputation as he was wheeled into surgery. The doctors not only saved his foot, but Connor was back to playing sports just months later. The Princeton lad simply has a lot of heart and tackled his ordeal like a hero.

The competitive nature of sports often brings out the worst in sports, but this time, during a youth football game in Princeton, it brought out the best. A coach from Dixon asked Princeton’s players if they would allow Jacob Garland, a special-needs youth football player, to score a touchdown. Most importantly, they made it seem legit. Jacob’s reaction was priceless. I’ll call it a tie with the Connor Alter story.

Another a feel-good story I wrote this year was on golfer Dick Marshall, who scored his first hole-in-one. Dick was born with a handicap but has tackled golf and life with full gusto.

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