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Special to The Laker/Lutz News

Wharton blows past North Port 76-39

February 21, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

Wildcats tide balanced attack, team play to victory

 

By Kyle LoJacono

 

Wharton boys basketball didn’t just beat North Port in the Class 8A regional quarterfinals Feb. 14 at home, they forced a running clock in the fourth quarter to take the contest 76-39.

The Wildcats (23-4) rode a balanced attack to the lopsided victory with five players reaching double-digit points.

“That’s a coach’s dream,” said Wharton coach Tommy Tonelli. “Getting five guys in double digits means they can’t lock in on one or two guys, but we’re very team oriented. That’s how we operate. We’re all about being a team on both ends of the floor.”

Wharton senior point guard CJ McGill scored a team-high 24 points in the regional quarterfinals. (Photo by Tim McClain)

The offense was led by CJ McGill’s 24 points and seven assists.

The senior point guard punished the Bobcats (14-14) for giving him space on the parameter by hitting four 3-pointers before halftime. North Port started stepping out to contest his shot after halftime, so McGill began driving to the basket for layups.

“CJ just did what he always does,” Tonelli said. “He takes what they give him. He knows what his role is, and he knows what he has to do to help the team win. He’s doing a great job, and his teammates feed off of him. He’s all about the team.”

The 5-foot-8 McGill also crashed the boards and pulled down nine rebounds.

“That’s CJ McGill for you,” said junior forward Chase Litton. “He’s probably the most underrated kid I’ve ever played with, and probably one of the best I’ve ever played with. He can do it all. He can shoot; he can drive. Wish he was a little bit bigger, but other than that he can do it all.”

Litton posted a double-double with 10 rebounds and 12 points, 10 of which came after halftime when the Wildcats started attacking the Bobcats in the paint.

“In the first half they were jumping on screens from our guards, and we started noticing that in the second half,” Litton said. “When they started jumping out after screens we started kicking it in for easy buckets.”

Senior guard Virgil Crump added an early offensive spark off the bench by scoring all 10 of his points in the first quarter.

“I was ready; I was up for this game,” Crump said. “All day in school I was thinking about this game right here. Wanted to help my team get this win.”

Wharton also got double-digit scoring from senior Sir Patrick Reynolds (13 points) and Jaken Grier (10 points). Reynolds, a forward/guard, added seven rebounds, while Grier, a guard, posted five rebounds and five assists.

“We’ve got a lot of senior leadership with CJ, Sir Patrick, Jaken, Tyler Langston and Virgil coming off the bench,” Tonelli said. “That’s five seniors right there who have been through a lot and been in tough situations. I would expect great leadership in these kinds of games from those guys.”

The Wildcats led 40-22 at halftime, but didn’t let up with a 12-3 run coming out of the break.

“Coach said we got 16 minutes left, and we need to treat it like we’re down and it’s our last game,” Crump said. “We needed to keep pushing and keep playing.”

McGill said they’ve fallen into the trap of slowing down after piling up a big lead, but weren’t going to let it happen against the Bobcats.

“Some games we’ll play the first 16 minutes hard and get a big lead, but then just kind of relax,” McGill said. “Tonight we wanted to keep going for 32 minutes.”

The blowout victory comes a year after Wharton lost at home in the regional quarterfinals 64-63 to East Lake.

“It hurt so much last year to lose on our home court,” McGill said. “We didn’t want that to happen again. We weren’t going to let that happen again, and we got it done.”

Litton added, “We didn’t want to make a statement per say, but we wanted to show that we’re not a one and done team. We just came out and showed what we can do, and the score speaks for itself.”

Tonelli said he talked with his players about the previous year’s disappointment leading up to the game against North Port.

“I told the guys that there’s only one way to put last year behind us and having people talk about it, and that was to come out and win this game,” Tonelli said. “Take care of this game, and it takes the sting out from last year. It was about moving forward.”

The Wildcats travel to Sarasota Riverview Feb. 19 at 7 p.m. for the regional semifinals. A victory would allow Wharton to host the winner of the Port St. Lucie Treasure Coast-Orlando University contest in the regional finals Feb. 23, also at 7 p.m.

—Follow Kyle LoJacono on Twitter: @Kyle_Laker

Eustis nips Wesley Chapel 53-51

February 21, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

 

By Don Trello

The Laker/Lutz News Correspondent

 

The Eustis boys basketball team overcame a nine-point deficit in the fourth quarter Feb. 14 to beat host Wesley Chapel 53-51 in the Class 5A regional quarterfinals.

The Wildcats (24-5), which won their first district championship in seven seasons this year, were going for their first playoff win since 2004.

“We’ve had back-to-back 24-win seasons and conference championships and a district title,” said Wesley Chapel coach Doug Greseth. “I hope it shows the younger kids how much work and dedication it takes to stay at this level.”

Guard Dustin Dunham gave the Panthers (18-10) a 49-48 lead with 29 seconds left in the game they never lost.

Wildcats junior guard Brian Rodriguez (10 points) closed the game with a 3-pointer as time expired.

“I told them we played hard, but didn’t make plays at the end of the game,” Greseth said. “I’m not very happy tonight. This was one of our poorer performances.”

Wesley Chapel senior forward Erik Thomas, who is the program’s career leader in points and rebounds, had a game-high 25 points and 11 rebounds.

“We just made too many mistakes,” Thomas said. “Mistakes killed us.”

The Wildcats led 11-10 at the end of the first quarter and took a 24-22 lead to the locker room at halftime.

Wesley Chapel stretched their advantage to 39-30 by starting the third on a 15-8 run. Thomas was 5-of-5 from the field to lead the surge.

“I gave it all I could,” said Thomas, who included East Tennessee State as a possibility when asked about next school year. “I’m happy with the goals I accomplished, but this kills me ending our season this way.”

The Wildcats turned the ball over 22 times, including eight in a hectic fourth quarter. Eustis had 15 turnovers and just one in the fourth period.

“We had a nine-point lead at one point that you have to hold, but we couldn’t connect on good opportunities,” Greseth said. “Some were unforced turnovers. We lost our composure.”

Anthony Allen led Eustis with 19 points. The Panthers were 22 for 47 from the field and 9-of-9 from the free throw line. Dunham finished with 16 points, including 10 in the fourth.

Wesley Chapel was 21 for 47 from the field and 6-of-10 from the charity stripe. Each team grabbed 20 rebounds.

The Wildcats had three seniors on their roster, and junior point guard Carson Emery will be among the returning starters next season.

“We accomplished two goals (winning the conference and district), and everyone should be happy about that,” said Emery, who scored nine. “It’s a shame we had to end it like this, but I know we can do something good next year.”

 

Wiregrass falls at St. Pete

The Wiregrass Ranch boys basketball team lost its Class 7A regional quarterfinals contest at St. Petersburg 77-48 Feb. 12. The usual high-scoring Bulls were held to just four points in the fourth quarter and fell behind by 20 at halftime — a hole they could not climb out of.

New expectations for Freedom girls track

February 21, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

 

By Kyle LoJacono

 

Freedom girls track and field coach Dwight Smith has picked up a new pastime in the weeks leading up to this season.

Along with the hours he spends getting his athletes into peak form, Smith is spending his spare moments crunching numbers.

“The numbers we’ve been coming up with are amazing,” said Smith, who is in his fourth-year with the program. “I don’t want to jinx it, but we can do some amazing things.”

Part of the reason Smith has been reviewing the points his team can possibly pick up in meets is the fact that he has 45 girls on his roster, 15 more than any other squad he’s had.

Freedom senior Alex Mitchell is part of Freedom’s 4×800 meter relay team that has its sights set on states. (File photo)

“From the beginning it was about getting the girls to believe in my philosophy,” Smith said. “We’re a family. They’re all sisters, and I’m like the figurehead, like the dad. We come from all walks of life, but we’re all a family and get along. From four years ago to now that’s what’s helped us build up this program. … We have a lot of depth. We’re trying to go four deep in every event.”

The excitement is not just about the number of Patriots, but the quality of those athletes.

Freedom returns Sandra Akachukwu, who claimed Class 4A state medals in the long and high jumps and 100 and 200 meters last year as a junior. Also back is sprinter/hurdler Jasmyn Perry, distance athletes Alex Mitchell and Annie Tedesco and shot putter Bianca Igwe, just to name a few.

The Patriots are also boosted by the transfer of senior Faith Woodard, who reached the 4A final in four events and claimed the state high jump championship by clearing 5-feet, 8-inches.

“Faith is still going to do the high jump, and we’re going to have her do a couple other things too,” Smith said. “We’re going to take one thing away that she did before and put her in something else. I don’t want to say exactly what yet so that it’s a surprise.”

Smith, who is also Freedom’s girls cross country coach, began building the program with its distance athletes. He said he expects a lot out of his 4×800 relay team, which reached states the last two seasons and includes Lauren Arfaras, Mitchell and Tedesco.

“They’ve already knocked about 13 seconds off their time,” Smith said. “That’s a big improvement. … I’m leaving the last spot open for competition, so there’s a couple girls battling it out.”

Mitchell and Tedesco were on the relay that has the school record of 9 minutes, 47 seconds and placed 10th at the 4A final last year, two spots away from a spot on the podium and a state medal.

“I’m hoping that this year we can get on the podium,” said Mitchell, who also runs the 800. “We’ve never been able to do that before, but I think we’re going to be really strong. We’ve got three strong people right now, so I really hope we can find another one who can take us to that next level.”

Tedesco, who also runs the 1,600, said the stamina built during the cross country season carries over to track, as does the chemistry of the distance athletes and belief they have in Smith.

“He’s very encouraging,” Tedesco said. “He’s a great coach because he’s serious when he needs to be, but he also jokes around with us all the time.”

Smith pointed out that his squad should be more balanced than in previous seasons.

“The past couple of years the distance athletes really carried the team, and last year Sandra carried us alone for the sprints,” Smith said. “This year, it’s going to be more balanced than years past. Right now, I’m thinking the sprints are going to be our strong point, and I’ve talked to the distance athletes that we’ve got to carry our own weight and step up to the plate.”

Smith said assistant Ryan McGee, who coaches the Patriots’ sprinters and jump athletes, has been a big part of building that balance since joining the program three years ago after spending seven at Wharton.

“We don’t even have the basketball girls out here yet, but when they get here we’ll be really tough,” McGee said. “Just going over the numbers, it’s kind of scary if they can do what they’re capable of.”

Smith sees the 4×400 relay of Sasha Cruz, Perry and Woodard as one that could make a run at states if they find the right person to complete the team.

“Looking at the times they can do, I’m looking at sub 3:50 if everything plays right,” Smith said.

The Patriots will compete in the Charles Johnson Invitational at King Feb. 23 at 8 a.m. The Class 4A-District 8 meet is at Leto April 17, followed by regionals at Leto April 24 and states at the University of North Florida May 4.

“I’m so excited,” Akachukwu said. “Our team is going to be amazing this year. We’ve got the potential to win districts, regionals and maybe even states. We’ve grown more as a family compared to last year, and the new girls coming in have just made us stronger.”

—Follow Kyle LoJacono on Twitter: @Kyle_Laker

Remade Land O’ Lakes track looks to stay on top

February 21, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

 

By Kyle LoJacono

 

The Land O’ Lakes boys track and field team dominated Pasco County last year by going 7-0 in local meets, winning the Sunshine Athletic Conference title and claiming Class 3A-District 6 championships.

It was not only one of the most successful seasons for the Gators in their 37-year history, but it was also the first season coaching track on any level for Land O’ Lakes coach Bill Schmitz.

“I talked with other coaches, and looking at what we’d done the previous couple years we expected to be in the middle of the pack in the conference and district,” Schmitz said. “I went into the first quad meet at Fivay with no expectations. We won that, and then every other meet in the regular season. As things went along we tried to get them competing and wanting to do well for the whole team, and that was a big reason we won conference and districts.”

Schmitz also got athletes to join the team, which built up its strength and depth.

Land O’ Lakes second-year coach Bills Schmitz looks on as his track athletes warm up before a recent practice.

“Coach Schmitz can be very persuasive,” Zapata said. “He was able to get those guys to come out and get a lot of points for us, and he got a lot of other guys to join the team.”

Among those recruited were throwers Jackson Cannon and Shadow Williams and sprinter Josh Davis.

“I saw early that we had an unbelievably strong senior class,” Schmitz said. “Ian McKenzie scored well in the pole vault, we had two great hurdlers in Darin Patmon and Kyle McKee, and then when Jackson and Shadow decided to join the team for the field events and Josh joined for the sprints meant we had so much leadership. Those guys knew what to do; they prepared and got the young guys competing better and better every week.”

Those six and two other seniors graduated, taking with them 100 points scored at districts and four league championships, but they helped create a winning mentality not seen in years for the Gators. Those who return want to keep that newly found success.

“Now we have a mindset and expectation that we have to live up to,” said junior Jamel Clark, who competes in the 400 meters and 4×400 relay. “We’re trying to maintain the status that we have. I’m seeing a lot of pride and dedication out here.”

The pride has spread across the school and has swelled the squad’s ranks.

“We don’t have all the wrestlers and basketball players out yet, and our numbers are already up over 50,” Schmitz said. “Last year at this time we were at 30. We had more and more athletes come to me asking when track was going to start; many of them I did not know personally before.”

The departures are great, but the Gators do bring back a young group of talented athletes, including junior distance runners Travis Nichols, Tyler Stahl and Jake Poore.

“Everybody is out here with the mentality of training to repeat,” Nichols said. “We’re all doing everything we can to replace those points and keep that spot.”

Schmitz said Clark led volunteer workouts to help get the athletes involved in track earlier. Sophomore Dylan Mohamed, who does the high jump, 100, 200 and 4×100, said that extra workouts are already paying off.

“We’ve had more time to condition,” Mohamed said. “That’s helped us out when we had our time trials, and I think that’ll help us go into the season better and give us more confidence as a team.”

Nichols said he had his best cross country season during the fall, which included a 12th-place finish at the 3A final and being named The Laker/Lutz News Boys Runner of the Year. He hopes that effort carries over to the track season so that he can return to states in the 3,200 and cut his personal record from 9 minutes, 46 seconds.

“Goal is to get top five,” Nichols said. “My goal is to get down to 9:30, and if I do I think I can get top five.”

Schmitz said they have many guys who can also bring in points in multiple events like Zapata, who will compete in the long and triple jumps, 200 and 4×100 relay. He said that, along with a more difficult schedule, will help keep his athletes competing into May.

“Last year we did a lot of smaller meets, and this year we’re going to the bigger ones,” Schmitz said. “I think that’s going to help prepare us for conference and districts, but also regionals so we can get more guys into the state meet.”

The 3A-6 meet is at Wiregrass Ranch April 16, followed by regionals at Leto April 24 and states May 3 at the University of North Florida.

The Gators start the season at the Early Bird Eagle Invitational at East Lake Feb. 20 at 3 p.m.

“I’m so excited and ready to go,” Zapata said. “I’m counting down the days until we go to East Lake.”

—Follow Kyle LoJacono on Twitter: @Kyle_Laker

 

Ruiz captures state title

February 21, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

 

By Jeff Odom

 

Sunlake girls weightlifter Alex Ruiz had one thing on her mind during the state meet Feb. 9 — redemption.

The 5-foot-1, 116-pound senior’s dreams of winning an individual championship were dashed last year when she was disqualified in the first round for cursing.

“I knew I had to go in and be a better person and a better athlete,” Ruiz said. “I knew I had a second chance, and I needed to be able to perform my best.”

And that’s exactly what she did.

Ruiz became the first girl in Pasco County to capture the 119-pound individual state crown while breaking the weight division record in bench press (180).

Alex Ruiz with her state medal. (Photo by Jeff Odom)

“I was just really focused on getting that first lift,” Ruiz said. “Once I got through that, I knew I had confidence in me, and I was able to get all three lifts.”

It was a proud moment for fifth-year Seahawks coach Denise Garcia, who had to convince Ruiz to keep going after her misfortune last season.

“She worked so hard for it, and people don’t know what’s behind the scenes,” Garcia said. “It’s amazing to see what she’s done, because she’s sacrificed so much.”

Ruiz, who took gold by two points over Navarre High’s Skye Barberi, lifted 330 total pounds with a clean and jerk of 150.

Garcia ran over and wrapped her arms around the state champion when the final score was announced.

“Everything that you want in an athlete is who Alex is,” Garcia said. “Her work ethic, her training, she’s hungry, and she wants it. You can’t teach the wanting that she has inside, and that’s what set her off.”

Ruiz said the amount of work Garcia put into her career is what kept her going, adding that she owes Garcia a lot for her success.

“She’s been a pain in my neck the past three years,” Ruiz joked. “I just know that that pushing someone along so much means that they see a lot of potential and dedication in you, and for that I am so thankful to her for not giving up on me after what happened last year. It was a lesson learned, and I definitely learned my lesson.”

Before the start of the meet, Ruiz approached the same judge that she had used profanity toward.

“After I apologized to him, I just felt a relief went away and I told myself, ‘OK, I’m ready to win a championship,’” Ruiz said. “I didn’t even ask my coach if I could, I just went straight up to him and I apologized. … He smiled and told me good luck, and that felt really good.”

As for her future, Ruiz plans on exploring the possibility of competing in the Junior Olympics and one day becoming a firefighter.

—Follow Jeff Odom on Twitter: @JOdomLaker

Finding her spot

February 21, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

Alisha Henry’s journey to pole vaulting

 

By Kyle LoJacono

 

There was a point when Wiregrass Ranch track and field athlete Alisha Henry thought she would be kicked off the Bulls’ team.

Now, the senior is the No. 2 ranked pole vaulter in Class 3A with the goal of becoming the seventh-year program’s first state champion.

Henry started doing track at John Long Middle in Wesley Chapel and continued while in high school. She did the high and long jumps, but wasn’t interested in doing other events.

“Coach (Don) Howard always tried to get me to run, but I refused,” Henry said. “I always wanted to be on the team, I just didn’t want to run. … He had me do cross country for two months, and I hated it. I broke my nose, and I used that as an excuse to get out of it.”

Wiregrass Ranch senior pole vaulter Alisha Henry took sixth at the 3A state meet last year and has the school record at 11-03. (File photo)

Henry decided to change her focus in February of her sophomore year, a move that ended the struggle to run and vaulted her into the conversion for district, regional and state titles.

“When we got a pole vault coach, coach Howard had me go over and try it. I did and liked it, and now I do it year-round,” Henry said.

That vault coach is Bob Leidel of Florida Pole Vault Academy in Tampa.

“Alisha was just natural,” Leidel said. “She jumped right into it, and I thought she had some training because she seemed really comfortable.”

In reality, Henry was terrified of the event.

“I’m still in the process of preparing myself for it,” Henry said with a laugh. “You just have to have positive thoughts. If you’re thinking about being way up in the air and how scary it is, then you back down. You don’t do things to your full potential. … You’re not going to go upside down if you’re not comfortable going upside down. It’s like trying a back flip for the first time. Most people aren’t going to go and just do it.”

Henry said the event requires upper body strength, speed and proper technique.

“I’ve been trying to get farther back in my vault,” Henry said. “I tend to come out of my vault too quickly, and I’m not holding it as far as I should. The turn isn’t easy either. … I’ve been doing a lot of strength training over the summer.”

Henry placed sixth at the 3A final last season by clearing 10 feet, 6 inches, but she was unsatisfied claiming her first state medal.

“I get really frustrated when I don’t jump the way I want to or the way I know I can,” Henry said. “Sometimes it’ll mess me up for my other attempts. … I’ve been trying to prepare myself mentally because that was my biggest flaw last year. I want to look back and see that I was positive in my thoughts so that I know that I gave it my all even if I don’t jump as high as I want to. I don’t want to get down on myself like I was last year, because that was not good.”

Henry’s personal record is 11-03, which is also the school record. She hopes to improve on that mark by at least nine inches before her senior year is done.

“I want 12 really badly,” Henry said.

Henry said she would like to compete at the University of South Florida, adding that the USF coaches told her clearing 12 would allow her to receive a full scholarship.

Howard said Henry is 100 percent a pole vaulter, but added that she has helped the squad in other ways.

“The beauty is she’s athletic enough that I can put her in the long jump at districts, and she scored for us and we barely won that last year,” Howard said. “Those points she scored in the long jump and in the pole vault were important for us. … You get the right athlete in the right situation and they’ll flourish, and that’s what’s happened with Alisha.”

—Follow Kyle LoJacono on Twitter: @Kyle_Laker

Hellman inks with Palm Beach

February 21, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

 

By Kyle LoJacono

 

Katie Hellman got to realize her dream of playing college soccer when she signed a letter of intent Feb. 12 to compete at Palm Beach Atlantic (PBA) University.

“Ever since I was little I wanted to play in college,” Hellman said. “I didn’t know if it would happen, but I always hoped that it would.”

Bishop McLaughlin girls soccer player Katie Hellman signs with Palm Beach Atlantic Feb. 12 as from left her mother Barbara, father David and brother Nick look on. (Photo by Kyle LoJacono)

Hellman, a senior midfielder at Bishop McLaughlin, picked up the game at age 5 with the Hernando Heat Youth Soccer Club. She also competed in volleyball, basketball and swimming while growing up, but she said nothing was like playing on the pitch.

“I just loved it from the start,” Hellman said. “It’s always been a part of me since I was little. My brother (Nick) played it and played here at Bishop. I played a lot of sports, but I just loved it so much because it’s such a team effort to win, but individually you still have to do your job.”

Hellman played four years with the Hurricanes, which included playoff berths during the 2010-11 and 2011-12 seasons.

She said it’s been really rewarding to help the seventh-year program make the postseason twice during her career.

“It’s really good to see a small school with not that many kids on the team able to make the playoffs twice,” Hellman said. “We worked hard to get to that level.”

Hellman helped the ‘Canes amass a 38-23-6 record the last four years with 30 goals and 24 assists in her career.

“You have your ups and downs with a team, but it’s really been a great family atmosphere here,” Hellman said. “So many of my friends I met playing soccer here. There’s been so many great experiences.”

Hellman said PBA offered everything she was looking for.

“It’s a smaller school atmosphere, which was something I wanted,” said Hellman, who will study marine biology. “They had a really nice team, and I really liked the coach. It’s by the water for marine biology, so it’s a good fit for me.”

PBA is an independent Division II program in West Palm Beach. The Sailfish went 13-5-2 last season and won a regional championship in the National Christian College Athletic Association (NCCAA) playoffs while reaching the third round of the national tournament.

—Follow Kyle LoJacono on Twitter: @Kyle_Laker

Scotch Institute in Wesley Chapel offers expertise in ENT, hearing and sleep medicine

February 20, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

In an era when many physicians are joining large multi-specialty groups, Dr. Brett Scotch remains independent as the solo physician of Scotch Institute of Ear Nose & Throat in Wesley Chapel.

Brett M. Scotch, DO, FAOCO Board Certified Otolaryngology and Facial Plastic Surgery
Brett M. Scotch, DO, FAOCO
Board Certified Otolaryngology and Facial Plastic Surgery

A board certified physician in Otolaryngology, Head & Neck Surgery and Facial Plastic Surgery, Dr. Scotch values the independence that comes with operating his own practice.

“I can provide the highest level of quality care for every aspect of my practice,” said Dr. Scotch. “I offer continuity of care because patients always see me, never an assistant. This allows us to treat every patient as if they are a member of our family and many become lifelong patients.”

Dr. Scotch practices from a modern facility in Wesley Chapel in the Summergate Professional Center, located off SR 56 behind Sam’s Club. The convenient location just minutes from I-75 and the new Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel attracts patients from throughout Pasco and northern Hillsborough counties.

Dr. Scotch came to Tampa in 2005 while serving as a Major in the US Air Force Medical Corps at MacDill Air Force Base. When his service was completed in 2008, he stayed and founded his own practice.

Since then, Dr. Scotch has expanded his practice from traditional ENT services to providing extensive expertise in allergy treatments and sleep medicine. He was one of the first doctors in the area to perform balloon sinuplasty to replace traditional sinus surgeries and is the medical director of several diagnostic sleep labs.

Dr. Scotch left his native Massachusetts to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, where he received his undergraduate degree and met his future wife, Jodi. He went on to medical school at Nova Southeastern University College of Osteopathic Medicine in Fort Lauderdale and then went on to complete a five-year residency in ENT and facial plastic surgery at Michigan State University affiliated hospitals.

What influenced Dr. Scotch to become a specialist in ENT medicine?

“It’s a wonderful mix of various populations – kids to seniors. My oldest patient is 100 and the youngest are infants,” said Dr. Scotch. “It’s a nice balance of surgery and office-based procedures, all which makes for a very interesting practice.”

Dr. Scotch sees patients in four core areas: sinus & allergy, ear nose & throat, hearing, and sleep. If hospitalization is required, Dr. Scotch has privileges at, Florida Hospital Zephyrhills and Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel, which has a state-of-the-art sinus surgical suite where he performs sinus surgery if needed.

“Being in Florida, we see a lot of sinus and allergy problems,” said Dr. Scotch. “We try to get away from allergy shots and mostly use under-the-tongue allergy drops.” They are less invasive and usually a better tolerated treatment than traditional shots.

Daily allergy drops are conveniently used at home, typically give faster results and are very safe. They are especially great for kids – we have children treated as young as 4 years old.”

Another area where Dr. Scotch is a leading physician is in sleep medicine.

“Sleep is very important,” said Dr. Scotch. “Without enough sleep, it affects one’s energy level, general medical condition and overall health. It even affects weight loss and metabolism. If a sleep problem remains untreated, it can lead to early heart and blood pressure problems.”

Because sleep is medically necessary, most insurance companies cover treatment for sleep disorders, including insomnia, snoring, sleep apnea and sleep behavioral disorders.

“Often times a patient does not recognize the severity of the problem, but their bed partner does,” said Dr. Scotch. “Some studies estimate that at least 30 percent of adults and possibly as many as 50 percent of the population in some demographics snore. Multiple studies reveal a significant correlation between loud snoring and risk of heart attack and stroke.”

Dr. Scotch, who is certified in Sleep Medicine, has unique expertise in that he can treat all aspects of a patients’ sleep disorder, from non-invasive medical therapy to minimally invasive surgical techniques to treat snoring and sleep apnea.

Another area of expertise at the Scotch Institute is the identification and treat- ment of hearing loss. Working alongside Dr. Scotch is clinical audiologist Barbara Drobes, MS, CCC-A who has more than16 years experience working with pediatric and adult patients.

Hearing loss is a leading disability — 10 percent of Americans report that hearing loss affects their ability to understand normal speech.

“We help people suffering from hearing loss with multiple modalities – everything from counseling to natural remedies to hearing aids to surgery,” said Dr. Scotch.

In addition to his medical qualifications, Dr. Scotch is known for his warm, caring, and professional demeanor. He was awarded the 2011 Physician of the Year by the statewide Florida Osteopathic Medical Association for his devotion as a leader, educator, and role model, and more recently the 2012 Community Physician Award by Florida Hospital Zephyrhills.

His office is located at the Seven Oaks Summergate Professional Center, 27406 Cashford Circle, Wesley Chapel. He can be reached at (813) 994-8900, or at www.ScotchENT.com.

This story is a feature of the advertising department. 

New cancer center provides convenience for patients

February 14, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

 

By Jeff Odom

 

The new Cancer Institute Adult Outpatient Infusion Center at St. Joseph’s Hospital-North in Lutz is offering more than just easily accessible service to cancer patients.

It’s giving them a little piece of home, too.

The center, located at 4211 Van Dyke Road inside the hospital, opened its doors in December. Right away patients noticed a difference with a relaxed setting to provide comfort during treatment procedures.

“It’s amazing,” said Lutz resident Mary Crook, a patient who is undergoing treatment for colon cancer. “I have zero complaints about the whole thing, and as far as the chemo center and what is going on there, it’s perfect for us.”

The hospital has made comfort a priority with high-definition televisions, wireless Internet and plenty of space for guests. The amenities are something Mary, along with her husband Bob, appreciates very much.

Mary Crook is receiving treatment at the Cancer Institute Adult Outpatient Infusion Center at St. Joseph’s Hospital-North after being diagnosed with colon cancer. (Photo by Jeff Odom)

“If I had to have this experience anywhere, I would want to have it here,” Mary said. “The people that take care of me are so wonderful, and the whole place is gorgeous. It’s top of the line.”

Patients staying in the center also have access to a snack bar, which offers sandwiches, treats and a variety of hot and cold beverages. Some rooms even accommodate guests spending the night with a pullout bed.

Bob, who is a manager at the Publix Supermarket located at the apex of US 41 in Lutz, said the location is perfect, because he can be to the hospital in as little as 10 minutes to support his wife.

“It’s good to know that I can be there, because that’s right up there in the top of the line in importance,” Bob said. “So far, everything that has gone down I’ve been able to be there with her for it. It’s good for me, because I can keep tabs on everything that’s going on, and it’s good for her because I can be there for the moral support.”

In addition to treatment facilities, the center includes a private education room for oncology nurses to consult with patients and their families, a pharmacy annex so chemotherapy can be stored and mixed on site and an expansive nursing station. There’s even an exit for patients to leave without disturbance.

The cancer institute’s director Brad Smith said in a release that the center is already making itself known as a solution to patients with busy schedules that would otherwise have to travel to the main hospital in Tampa or other cancer treatment centers like Moffitt.

“It can be challenging for cancer patients to maintain their busy treatment schedule, and when you are not feeling well an extra 20 to 30 minutes in the car can make a real difference,” Smith said. “Our cancer patients are very special to us. Knowing that the Cancer Institute Adult Outpatient Center at St. Joseph’s Hospital-North is available to serve them is very rewarding.”

Mary said that she feels welcomed every time she comes for treatment, because the nursing staff always has time to talk with her and make sure she is doing well.

“It’s the most convenient place for the whole community, I believe,” Mary said. “They’ve got such a great staff with Angela (Papadopoulos), Kathy (Weinstein), and now all of the nurses that are coming into the infusion department call it the ‘social hour.’ We’re all in there chitchatting and whatnot. I just love all of those people.”

For more information about the Cancer Institute Adult Outpatient Infusion Center, call (813) 870-4123.

—Follow Jeff Odom on Twitter: @JOdomLaker

Wiregrass Ranch and Pasco County settle dispute

February 14, 2013 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

 

 

By B.C. Manion

 

Pasco County commissioners approved an agreement Feb. 5 that settles a dispute over required road improvements in connection with the development of Wiregrass Ranch, a mixed-use project that covers thousands of acres in Wesley Chapel.

County staff and William Merrill, an attorney representing the developers of Wiregrass Ranch, have been working for months to hammer out a settlement agreement.

The completed document spanned hundreds of pages. It calls, in part, for the Porter family, the developers of Wiregrass Ranch, to create roads, provide right-of-way and accommodate transit.

The settlement also reduces or eliminates some of the requirements that were contained in the original development approval and extends project deadlines.

Entitlements for development were also changed.

The new plan calls for a total of 10,472 residential units, a decrease of 343 units from the previous plan. It also calls for approximately 1.26 million square feet of office space, which is a 200,000-square-foot increase. The maximum number of hospital beds has been boosted to 371 hospital beds, an increase of 271.

Other entitlements, which remain the same, are: 300,00 square feet of attraction and recreation space, 480 hotel rooms and 707 community college students.

One element of the agreement calls for developing the project’s town center with short blocks, a mixture of residential and commercial uses, bicycle and pedestrian connections and a grid road network.

Those design elements, which the county calls mixed-use trip reduction measures (MUTRM), will encourage people to use their feet to get around, rather than tooling around behind a steering wheel.

A study by Tindale-Oliver & Associates projects an 11 percent decrease in vehicle miles traveled when using this planning approach, said Cynthia Spidell, senior planner and Development of Regional Impact coordinator for the county.

The plan also calls for an elementary school within the town center, prompting Commissioner Kathryn Starkey to suggest the county needs to work more closely with Pasco County Schools to create opportunities for shared use of public projects.

Starkey said the county should approach Pasco Superintendent Kurt Browning to see if the new school’s play areas can be set up to be accessible for public use.

The walkable town center is just one of hundreds of details approved in the settlement between the county and developers.

The county and developer worked out myriad issues regarding the master plan for the Wiregrass project, which is so massive that it is considered to be a development of regional impact.

But the developer’s attorney told commissioners the two sides had not reached an agreement regarding the potential alignment of a planned road to link Bruce B. Downs Boulevard and SR 54.

Maps within the agreement show a road linking the two, and the agreement spells out that the developer must construct a four-lane road, but provide right-of-way for six lanes to allow for future widening.

The developer has agreed to build the road and provide the right-of-way.

But the alignment has not been decided, and the developer wants to know the general area where the road could go so it can sell land that is not within that area, Merrill told commissioners.

Merrill asked commissioners to remove any lines from the map that show a potential alignment and to instead use a red triangle to indicate the area where the road could go through.

County administrator John Gallagher and growth management administrator Richard Gehring warned commissioners about taking any action that might be later construed as an agreement to limit the options for where the road can go.

They said the whole point of making the connection between Bruce B. Downs Boulevard and SR 54 is to divert traffic to the east to decrease the volume at the existing intersection of Bruce B. Downs and SR 54.

That intersection is too close to Interstate 75, and the traffic volume is degrading the effectiveness of the area’s road network, Gehring said. The proposed road is intended to address that problem.

No matter what the map says, however, transportation experts told commissioners the specific alignment will require approval from the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) because the new road will connect two state roads.

Starkey called for granting Merrill’s request, noting the Porters will have to disclose to any potential buyers that the specific alignment has not been determined and any alignment would have to be approved by FDOT.

Her motion passed unanimously.

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