31 Aralık 2012 Pazartesi

Butler's Kalambayi a finalist for the Butkus Award

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Butler senior linebacker Peter Kalambayi is one of five finalists for the high school Butkus Award, honoring the nation's top linebackers and awarded by the Butkus foundation.

Finalists were selected by a panel of 51 coaches, scouts and journalists. Winners for the high school, college and professional award will be announced the first week of December.

High school finalists include:

  • Reuben Foster, Auburn, Alabama 
  • Trey Johnson, Central Gwinett, Lawrenceville, Georgia 
  • Peter Kalambayi, Butler, Matthews, North Carolina 
  • Isaac Savaiinaea, Punahou, Honolulu, Hawaii 
  • Jaylon Smith, Bishop Luers, Fort Wayne, Indiana

For more information, visit www.thebutkusaward.com.

Post-game comments from Charlotte Catholic's loss in the NCHSAA 3AA championship

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I wasn't able to get quotes into the print version of my story about Charlotte Catholic's loss to Northern Guilford in the NCHSAA 3AA championship game Saturday. The game started 45 minutes late and deadline loomed just minutes after the clock hit zero.

I did rush down to the media room after and added quotes to the online version of the story, which you can find here. 
Here are other notable post-game comments from both teams:

Charlotte Catholic

Head coach Jim Oddo:

Opening statement:
“We picked a bad day to have a bad day.”
[...]
“Really, we hung with them for a half and right at the close of the first half we drove theball down the field and scored and were in it and then with just a little bit of time left hepopped a long one and I think that was the one that kind of broke our back.”
[...]
“I thought our kids played hard and we’re very happy to be here, but sorry that it wasn’t abetter game. But I’m proud of our young men and what they’ve done.”

On the uncharacteristic mistakes his team made:
“We turned it over too much early in the ball game. … When things went south, they wentsouth and then it snow balled.”

On Northern Guilford running back T.J. Logan:
“We knew that he was going to pop one or two. There’s no way you can hold him downfor a whole ball game and I expected that somewhere along the line he’d get off oneor two. I didn’t expect he’d get off that many, but, you know, that’s the way it is. He’san outstanding athlete. Blinding speed. And if you don’t get him tied up at the line ofscrimmage or close to it, half the time he’s going to take it to the house.”

On if Charlotte Catholic's offensive style makes it harder to come back from an early deficit:
“Our big problem was we rely on some base plays and they were able to take them away.We were not able to do what we wanted to do. We were still getting four and three andgetting first downs and matriculating down field and shortening the game, but it doesn't take them very long to hand the ball to Logan to bounce back.”
[...]
“They just bunched them up and we weren’t good enough to take it to them. And we're not going to pass every down.”

Running back Elijah Hood:

On what he hopes to take away from the game, going into his senior year:
"I mean, it's kind of a sour experience but I'm just going to use that to move on. I mean, I'm going to keep growing as a football player. Obviously there were some things in that game I could have probably did better. I probably missed some blocks, I've got to go watch some film and stuff.
"There's a lot for me to learn, so I'm just trying to learn from it. Football is a learning experience so I'm just going to keep learning, try to get better, that's the way I see it.
"Because I've got another year, I'm going to go back at it, so I'm just going to go ahead and go for the state championship next year. Same heart, same passion, same drive. Work harder. That's all I can give, give it my all."  
Northern Guilford
Head coach Johnny Roscoe: 
“We said defense was going to have to win a game for us and they did. They containedtheir running attack.”

Talking about the players sitting at the media table with him:
“These guys have been here four years with us and this is our program, right here in frontof you.”

On if he was surprised by Catholic's miscues, like fumbled punts:
“They made very few mistakes and that gave us an advantage. It really did. …It’s an outstanding football game. We knew what they were coming to do. … We knewwhat was in store. 34 (Elijah Hood) is an outstanding player, the offensive line did a good job and wehad to come in and defensively do something.”

On the importance of Northern Guilford's two quick scores before and after the half:
“It was so important. … the movement of the game goes back and forth so many times… It’s so important to stop their momentum because we saw them on film, certain teamswould stop them and then, bam they’d get an 80 yard run, a 70 yard run, a 60, and so weknew that they were going to make some runs at us and we were going to have to justtake care of those and move the ball offensively.”

Running back T.J. Logan:

On what helped him have such a big game:
“The O-line. I feel like in practice they opened up a lot of holes and I just try tohit the seam.”
[...]
“They were just like over pursuing a little bit so I could just cut to the back side.”

On his response to Charlotte Catholic fans who might say they Nighthawks were running up the score:
“It’s just football. You play to the end.”

On how it felt to finish an undefeated season with a state championship:
“It feels good. We’ve been playing together since like the seventh grade."
[...]
“This is perfect.”

On what he would say to fans of North Carolina, where he's committed to play next year:
“I’m ready. I’m ready for Tar Heel nation.”

Defensive lineman Austin Simmons:

On how playing in past state championship games helped the team this year:
“It helped us get ready for the noise and the level of competition. Every player, like theseniors on their team, it was their last game so they were going to play as hard as they can. So we were ready to face their best. Film can’t prepare us for how well they’re going toplay when they’re ready just to give their all.”

Beth Erb breaks Country Day's career scoring record

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Charlotte Country Day senior girls' basketball player Beth Erb broke the school's girls' basketball scoring record in a Dec. 5 game against Parkwood.

Erb scored 12 points in the 47-36 loss, giving her 1,170 career points with the Buccaneers. The previous record was 1,164 points held by Janice Roberts, a 2010 graduate now playing at Furman.

Erb also had 3 rebounds, two steals and two assists in the game.

George Whitfield's baseball clinic scheduled for Jan. 12

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The baseball clinic run by North Carolina High School Athletic Association Hall of Famer George Whitfield is set for its 41st annual renewal.

The clinic is scheduled for Goldsboro High School on Saturday, January 12, 2013 and features another tremendous lineup. Registration is scheduled from 7:30 to 9:00 a.m, and then the clinic will run until 6 p.m.

The clinic is open to all players from Little League through high school, and all coaches at any level are welcome.

Ron Polk, the assistant baseball coach at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, will be the kickoff speaker at 9:05 am, followed by Dr. Chris Hasty and Trey Mooring, who will speak on injury prevention for today's baseball players.

Here are some of the other outstanding baseball people and topics that will be covered at this annual event:

• “What College Coaches Are Looking for in Today’s Athletes” will be discussed by UNC-Greensboro assistant coach Matt Boykin, East Carolina head coach Billy Godwin, Georgia Southern assistant Chris Moore, Liberty assistant Garrett Quinn and Louisburg College head coach Keith Shumate.

•”Practice Organization for the High School Coach” will include Tony Guzzo, head coach at Nash Central High School, and Appalachian State head coach Billy Jones.

• "Indoor and On-Field Drills To Become a Better Player” will be presented by Campbell head coach Greg Goff, Richmond assistant coaches Tag Montague and Tanner Biagini, and Mount Olive assistant Rob Watt.

• Pitching will be covered by Shenandoah University head coach Kevin Anderson, Pitt Community College head coach Tommy Eason, North Carolina assistant coach Scott Forbes; Sam Narron, pitching coach for the Auburn Doubledays in the Washington National minor league organization; and Dan Roszel, East Carolina assistant coach.

•Catching will feature Virginia Commonwealth assistant Kurt Elbin, Eastern Wayne High School head coach James Fulghum, Duke assistant J.J. Jordan, Virginia assistant Matt Kirby, and Virginia Military Institute assistant Michael Roberts. • Infield play instructors will be Central Florida retired head coach Jay Bergman, UNC-Wilmington head coach Mark Scalf, Brunswick Community College head coach Robbie Allen, U.S. Military Academy assistant coach Matt Reid, and Michigan assistant Nick Schnabel.

• Outfield play will be covered by Methodist head coach Tom Austin; retired Ohio University head coach Joe Carbone; Paul Faulk, a scout for the Washington Nationals; Mount Olive head coach Carl Lancaster, and East Carolina assistant Ben Sanderson.

• Base Running will be discussed by Dave Bristol, former major league manager with the Reds, Brewers, Braves and Giants; Catawba head coach Jim Gantt; High Point assistant Bryan Peters, UNC-Asheville head coach Tom Smith and Wake Forest head coach Tom Walter.

• Hitting instructors will be retired Virginia Tech head coach Chuck Hartman; Campbell assistant Justin Haire, College of Charleston assistant Matt Heath, UNC-Greensboro head coach Link Jarrett, and N.C. State assistant Brian Ward.

Coach Whitfield will mail information to schools across the state in November. The only charge for the clinic is a pre-registration fee of $60 per person, which includes lunch. Any school or team that registers six or more people will be charged $50 per person.

Registration at the door will be $70.

Players 15 years of age and under may have their fathers attend for free, and they can eat lunch for just seven dollars.

Questions about the clinic may be directed to George at (919) 778-6013 or write him at 216 Hardingwood Drive, Goldsboro, NC 27534.

--NCHSAA release

Charlotte Latin's Eve Davis named Gatorade Player of the Year

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Charlotte Latin senior volleyball player Eve Davis is the 2012-13 Gatorade North Carolina Volleyball Player of the Year.

The Gatorade Company, in collaboration with USA Today High School Sports, made the announcement Dec. 12. Davis is Charlotte Latin's first Gatorade Player of the Year for volleyball.

The 6-foot-2 outside hitter had 654 kills, 379 digs, 76 aces and 47 blocks on a Hawk team that went 38-1 and won the N.C. Independent Schools Athletic Association 3A state championship for the ninth year in a row.

Davis signed to play with N.C. State next year.

Davis was also selected as an American Volleyball Coaches Association Under Armour First-Team All-American. According to Charlotte Latin's Ellen Kazura, Davis and Latin coach Suzie Pignetti were on the way to Louisville for the All-American volleyball match when the announcement was made. Pignetti was named AVCA National Coach of the Year.

"Eve Davis is a complete package," Nation Ford High head coach Carrie Christian said in a statement. "She is a strong and consistent passer and a dynamic hitter. She not only swings hard, she also places the ball well and uses various shots which make her incredibly hard to defend."

For more information, visit playeroftheyear.gatorade.com.

20 Aralık 2012 Perşembe

South Charlotte football previews and predictions: State championships

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Each week, South Charlotte News prep sports writer Corey Inscoe breaks down the biggest south Charlotte football games and gives predictions for every area contest. 

Last week: 2-0 
Overall: 81-18 

It's hard to believe we are already at the end. Two south Charlotte teams will play for state championships this weekend.

I'll be covering Charlotte Catholic's game in Winston Salem, so be sure to follow me on Twitter (@CoreyInscoe) for scores and information about the game.

Langston Wertz will be covering Butler, so follow him at @langstonwertzjr for updates on that game.

Butler vs. Fayetteville Britt, 11 a.m. Dec. 1, UNC Chapel Hill -- These two teams played in the 2009 state championship when Butler won its first state title. Now the Bulldogs are trying to win their fourth. My pick: Butler.

Read more detailed previews of this game at www.charlotteobserver.com/preps.

Charlotte Catholic vs. Northern Guilford: 7 p.m. Dec. 1, Wake Forest University -- Since I'm covering this game, I will go more in depth.

Northern Guilford (14-0) comes into this game undefeated and as the two-time defending state champions. The school, which opened in 2007, has only lost five games in the last four seasons. The Knighthawks, like Catholic, rely on a star running back, senior North Carolina-commit T.J. Logan.

Logan has rushed for 2,760 and 40 touchdowns. Northern Guilford averages more than 297 yards per game on the ground this season.

The Knighthawks are very quick on defense. Aptly named junior linebacker T.J. Ruff leads the team in tackles and senior defensive end Tre Purcell has 10 sacks on the year. The defense has only given up 14 points in the playoffs.

The key for the Charlotte Catholic offense all year has been junior running back Elijah Hood, who comes into the championship game with 3,169 yards and 46 touchdowns. But the semifinal game against Statesville showed that defenses have to be wary of paying too much attention to Hood. Senior Alex Sabates had several long rushes, as did quarterback Ryan Miller. Five different backs scored for the Cougars in that game.

Oddo said after the game that he runs a four-back offense and -- when it works like it's supposed to -- it's hard to stop.

The Cougars' offensive line deserves a lot of credit for getting the team to this point. They pushed around Statesville's defensive line and linebackers all game.

The Catholic defense has impressed me in the last two playoffs games. Linebackers Kevin Kirchmer and Ryan Manion, defensive linemen Karrington King and Jamie Choulas and defensive back Tafon Mainsah lead a squad that held a high powered Statesville offense that averaged 41.7 points this season to 19 points last week.

Charlotte Catholic is in the championship for the first time since 2007. The Cougars haven't won a title since 2005.

My pick: Charlotte Catholic.

Check out the rest of my state championship game picks here. 

Post-game comments from Charlotte Catholic's loss in the NCHSAA 3AA championship

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I wasn't able to get quotes into the print version of my story about Charlotte Catholic's loss to Northern Guilford in the NCHSAA 3AA championship game Saturday. The game started 45 minutes late and deadline loomed just minutes after the clock hit zero.

I did rush down to the media room after and added quotes to the online version of the story, which you can find here. 
Here are other notable post-game comments from both teams:

Charlotte Catholic

Head coach Jim Oddo:

Opening statement:
“We picked a bad day to have a bad day.”
[...]
“Really, we hung with them for a half and right at the close of the first half we drove theball down the field and scored and were in it and then with just a little bit of time left hepopped a long one and I think that was the one that kind of broke our back.”
[...]
“I thought our kids played hard and we’re very happy to be here, but sorry that it wasn’t abetter game. But I’m proud of our young men and what they’ve done.”

On the uncharacteristic mistakes his team made:
“We turned it over too much early in the ball game. … When things went south, they wentsouth and then it snow balled.”

On Northern Guilford running back T.J. Logan:
“We knew that he was going to pop one or two. There’s no way you can hold him downfor a whole ball game and I expected that somewhere along the line he’d get off oneor two. I didn’t expect he’d get off that many, but, you know, that’s the way it is. He’san outstanding athlete. Blinding speed. And if you don’t get him tied up at the line ofscrimmage or close to it, half the time he’s going to take it to the house.”

On if Charlotte Catholic's offensive style makes it harder to come back from an early deficit:
“Our big problem was we rely on some base plays and they were able to take them away.We were not able to do what we wanted to do. We were still getting four and three andgetting first downs and matriculating down field and shortening the game, but it doesn't take them very long to hand the ball to Logan to bounce back.”
[...]
“They just bunched them up and we weren’t good enough to take it to them. And we're not going to pass every down.”

Running back Elijah Hood:

On what he hopes to take away from the game, going into his senior year:
"I mean, it's kind of a sour experience but I'm just going to use that to move on. I mean, I'm going to keep growing as a football player. Obviously there were some things in that game I could have probably did better. I probably missed some blocks, I've got to go watch some film and stuff.
"There's a lot for me to learn, so I'm just trying to learn from it. Football is a learning experience so I'm just going to keep learning, try to get better, that's the way I see it.
"Because I've got another year, I'm going to go back at it, so I'm just going to go ahead and go for the state championship next year. Same heart, same passion, same drive. Work harder. That's all I can give, give it my all."  
Northern Guilford
Head coach Johnny Roscoe: 
“We said defense was going to have to win a game for us and they did. They containedtheir running attack.”

Talking about the players sitting at the media table with him:
“These guys have been here four years with us and this is our program, right here in frontof you.”

On if he was surprised by Catholic's miscues, like fumbled punts:
“They made very few mistakes and that gave us an advantage. It really did. …It’s an outstanding football game. We knew what they were coming to do. … We knewwhat was in store. 34 (Elijah Hood) is an outstanding player, the offensive line did a good job and wehad to come in and defensively do something.”

On the importance of Northern Guilford's two quick scores before and after the half:
“It was so important. … the movement of the game goes back and forth so many times… It’s so important to stop their momentum because we saw them on film, certain teamswould stop them and then, bam they’d get an 80 yard run, a 70 yard run, a 60, and so weknew that they were going to make some runs at us and we were going to have to justtake care of those and move the ball offensively.”

Running back T.J. Logan:

On what helped him have such a big game:
“The O-line. I feel like in practice they opened up a lot of holes and I just try tohit the seam.”
[...]
“They were just like over pursuing a little bit so I could just cut to the back side.”

On his response to Charlotte Catholic fans who might say they Nighthawks were running up the score:
“It’s just football. You play to the end.”

On how it felt to finish an undefeated season with a state championship:
“It feels good. We’ve been playing together since like the seventh grade."
[...]
“This is perfect.”

On what he would say to fans of North Carolina, where he's committed to play next year:
“I’m ready. I’m ready for Tar Heel nation.”

Defensive lineman Austin Simmons:

On how playing in past state championship games helped the team this year:
“It helped us get ready for the noise and the level of competition. Every player, like theseniors on their team, it was their last game so they were going to play as hard as they can. So we were ready to face their best. Film can’t prepare us for how well they’re going toplay when they’re ready just to give their all.”

Beth Erb breaks Country Day's career scoring record

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Charlotte Country Day senior girls' basketball player Beth Erb broke the school's girls' basketball scoring record in a Dec. 5 game against Parkwood.

Erb scored 12 points in the 47-36 loss, giving her 1,170 career points with the Buccaneers. The previous record was 1,164 points held by Janice Roberts, a 2010 graduate now playing at Furman.

Erb also had 3 rebounds, two steals and two assists in the game.

George Whitfield's baseball clinic scheduled for Jan. 12

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The baseball clinic run by North Carolina High School Athletic Association Hall of Famer George Whitfield is set for its 41st annual renewal.

The clinic is scheduled for Goldsboro High School on Saturday, January 12, 2013 and features another tremendous lineup. Registration is scheduled from 7:30 to 9:00 a.m, and then the clinic will run until 6 p.m.

The clinic is open to all players from Little League through high school, and all coaches at any level are welcome.

Ron Polk, the assistant baseball coach at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, will be the kickoff speaker at 9:05 am, followed by Dr. Chris Hasty and Trey Mooring, who will speak on injury prevention for today's baseball players.

Here are some of the other outstanding baseball people and topics that will be covered at this annual event:

• “What College Coaches Are Looking for in Today’s Athletes” will be discussed by UNC-Greensboro assistant coach Matt Boykin, East Carolina head coach Billy Godwin, Georgia Southern assistant Chris Moore, Liberty assistant Garrett Quinn and Louisburg College head coach Keith Shumate.

•”Practice Organization for the High School Coach” will include Tony Guzzo, head coach at Nash Central High School, and Appalachian State head coach Billy Jones.

• "Indoor and On-Field Drills To Become a Better Player” will be presented by Campbell head coach Greg Goff, Richmond assistant coaches Tag Montague and Tanner Biagini, and Mount Olive assistant Rob Watt.

• Pitching will be covered by Shenandoah University head coach Kevin Anderson, Pitt Community College head coach Tommy Eason, North Carolina assistant coach Scott Forbes; Sam Narron, pitching coach for the Auburn Doubledays in the Washington National minor league organization; and Dan Roszel, East Carolina assistant coach.

•Catching will feature Virginia Commonwealth assistant Kurt Elbin, Eastern Wayne High School head coach James Fulghum, Duke assistant J.J. Jordan, Virginia assistant Matt Kirby, and Virginia Military Institute assistant Michael Roberts. • Infield play instructors will be Central Florida retired head coach Jay Bergman, UNC-Wilmington head coach Mark Scalf, Brunswick Community College head coach Robbie Allen, U.S. Military Academy assistant coach Matt Reid, and Michigan assistant Nick Schnabel.

• Outfield play will be covered by Methodist head coach Tom Austin; retired Ohio University head coach Joe Carbone; Paul Faulk, a scout for the Washington Nationals; Mount Olive head coach Carl Lancaster, and East Carolina assistant Ben Sanderson.

• Base Running will be discussed by Dave Bristol, former major league manager with the Reds, Brewers, Braves and Giants; Catawba head coach Jim Gantt; High Point assistant Bryan Peters, UNC-Asheville head coach Tom Smith and Wake Forest head coach Tom Walter.

• Hitting instructors will be retired Virginia Tech head coach Chuck Hartman; Campbell assistant Justin Haire, College of Charleston assistant Matt Heath, UNC-Greensboro head coach Link Jarrett, and N.C. State assistant Brian Ward.

Coach Whitfield will mail information to schools across the state in November. The only charge for the clinic is a pre-registration fee of $60 per person, which includes lunch. Any school or team that registers six or more people will be charged $50 per person.

Registration at the door will be $70.

Players 15 years of age and under may have their fathers attend for free, and they can eat lunch for just seven dollars.

Questions about the clinic may be directed to George at (919) 778-6013 or write him at 216 Hardingwood Drive, Goldsboro, NC 27534.

--NCHSAA release

Charlotte Latin's Eve Davis named Gatorade Player of the Year

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Charlotte Latin senior volleyball player Eve Davis is the 2012-13 Gatorade North Carolina Volleyball Player of the Year.

The Gatorade Company, in collaboration with USA Today High School Sports, made the announcement Dec. 12. Davis is Charlotte Latin's first Gatorade Player of the Year for volleyball.

The 6-foot-2 outside hitter had 654 kills, 379 digs, 76 aces and 47 blocks on a Hawk team that went 38-1 and won the N.C. Independent Schools Athletic Association 3A state championship for the ninth year in a row.

Davis signed to play with N.C. State next year.

Davis was also selected as an American Volleyball Coaches Association Under Armour First-Team All-American. According to Charlotte Latin's Ellen Kazura, Davis and Latin coach Suzie Pignetti were on the way to Louisville for the All-American volleyball match when the announcement was made. Pignetti was named AVCA National Coach of the Year.

"Eve Davis is a complete package," Nation Ford High head coach Carrie Christian said in a statement. "She is a strong and consistent passer and a dynamic hitter. She not only swings hard, she also places the ball well and uses various shots which make her incredibly hard to defend."

For more information, visit playeroftheyear.gatorade.com.

16 Aralık 2012 Pazar

The Waiting Game... It's Worth It

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Savage Indeed
Originally uploaded by mdt1960
Maybe it’s the excitement related to teams who have never battled one another or maybe it’s the opportunity to attend a daytime game where I’ve never been, but I find the height of the Montana Class C (both eight-man and six-man) season comes during those first two weeks of the playoffs—the first round and the quarterfinals. It’s a “rich” time in that there are still so many venues to choose from and often the outcomes are very uncertain.

With the title games on the docket this coming weekend, and the available games are now whittled down to the bare minimum (even if they are the title games), I found myself reflecting on this juncture of the football season while attending the semifinal game at Big Sandy this past weekend.

It seems with each passing year, the ongoings of the other playoff games (i.e., those that are happening at the same time) become more available—even the other classes. For example, during the Big Sandy-Savage six-man shoot-out, we were updated several times by the announcer on the progress of the eight-man game at Chinook with Power-Dutton-Brady. Later we heard updates on the score in the other six-man semifinal game between Denton and Hysham. I suppose we can credit the infusion of cell phones for this effortless flow of scores between the obscure towns of Montana and other western states.

Oddly, there came no word from the showdown at Wibaux with Drummond nor was there anything mentioned about the other class games around the state. I wondered, was this simply because the games that were reported were fairly close by? It seemed reasonable that there might be someone from Big Sandy attending the game in Chinook because their nephew was playing, or something like that. And, wouldn’t Big Sandy have sent a scout to the Denton game should the Pioneers emerge victorious, allowing the scout to call in scores while working up a fresh scouting report on the victor from that game?


Elevator Stage
Originally uploaded by mdt1960
Maybe I read too much into this little sidebar of an event. Even so, with improved and more ubiquitous technology and communications, I wonder if the day will come when we will see the scores from other six-man and eight-man games around the state posted on the scoreboards like they’ve been doing for years in the professional stadiums. It seems like a stretch here in 2010, but few of us probably thought cell phones would be so prolific a mere twenty years ago.

As the Big Sandy-Savage game was drawing to its exciting close, we were informed that Chinook had overtaken Power-Dutton-Brady in the fourth quarter and Denton was still in control of their game with Hysham. Despite all of this, after the Warriors of Savage were crowned the victors at Big Sandy, there was never another word on those other games. Walking to my truck afterwards, I kept my ears perked for that one last announcement, but it never came.

Into the Montana darkness and on to Eddie’s Corner, I remained in the metaphorical darkness as well regarding the outcome of those other games. At first I considered checking on-line via my phone to see if the scores were posted, but decided I would wait and hear about the outcomes via the old-fashioned method—reading about them in the next day’s newspapers.

I half expected to hear about one of the other games while eating my dinner at the Eddie's Corner café—given it is such a central junction in the state. If that had been the case, I would have welcomed the news.

Nevertheless, after dinner I walked out into the darkest outlying areas of the truck stop’s parking area—beyond the parked semis—climbed into my cold sleeping bag in the bed of my pickup and wondered if Chinook had indeed held their lead after claiming it late in the game. “And what about Drummond and Wibaux,” I asked myself as I set the alarm on the cell phone? Was the Rainbow Club in Wibaux jumping with delight or were they drowning their sorrows again, almost a year later after losing to Drummond at home in the title game?

In an era that is being defined for its instant gratification, I fell asleep at Eddie’s Corner content with the idea of waiting to read about the scores in the Sunday newspapers, and therefore in synch with the rhythms of small town high school football.


Going Deep
Originally uploaded by mdt1960
ShoutoutHere’s to the Big Sandy football team in giving the undefeated Warriors of Savage all they could handle. I’d especially like to salute the savvy play of sophomore quarterback Trevor Lackner. He may have thrown three interceptions in battling a swift Savage defense but he also connected two of his four touchdown passes to his “big men.” The Pioneers’ first touchdown came on a 36-yard pass to Dallas Briese—a five-foot, ten-inch, 220-pound junior and later in the game he found sophomore Kaden Beck on a 34-yard strike who stands at six-foot and tips the scales at 260 pounds. It’s doubtful that Briese and Beck could outrun any of the Warriors on the field, but it was Lackner who saw them open and had the confidence to throw in their direction.

The Rivals: Montana's New Co-op

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Six-Man Solitude by mdt1960
Six-Man Solitude, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.When it comes to playing football under the circumstances of dwindling enrollment numbers, six-man football is the ultimate story of adaptation. A school with only fifteen players could prop up an eleven-man team with the hope that injuries don’t finish off their season. However, a better scenario would be for the same team to play six-man football and have enough players to scrimmage during practice and field a respectable and competitive team.

But, what if a school doesn’t even have twelve players—enough to scrimmage in six-man? In the case of Highwood and Geraldine—two perennial powerhouses in Montana six-man play—this is exactly what happened.

Since 1988 these two six-man teams have notched 18 championship game appearances… that’s 18 of the last 23 title games. Of those 18 title games, 15 resulted in victory. In five of those title games, the two rivals faced each other.

Beginning this year, due to a decline in classroom enrollments, the high-octane rivalry of Highwood and Geraldine will transform into a six-man football co-op that is already turning heads. Lead by Geraldine’s veteran coach, Rod Tweet, the Rivals will be competing in Montana’s Six-Man Northern Conference.

Tweet is cautious about making any kind of predictions regarding his team as a state contender. “We don’t have the number of kids to compete anymore,” declared Tweet. “The kids we have are good kids, but injuries play a big role in the game. So, it’s not like we’re going to get together and have 25 kids to play football.” The Rivals started their first week of practice with 16 kids on the roster.

Talk of the merge commenced during last year’s football season. Both teams starting looking at their (already low) numbers and anticipated that each school would barely have enough to field a six-man team. The initial projections were seven players from each school. Tweet’s first discussions were with his players. “I told the boys we were at a spot where I didn’t know if we could finish the season, because injuries are part of football and we’ve had more than are fair share in the last two or three years.”

Tigers and Mountaineers by mdt1960
Tigers and Mountaineers, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.Not only was that a dismal outlook for having a competitive season, but it also threatened either program’s future should injuries force such a small-staffed football team to forfeit games. According to Montana High School Association, if a school forfeits two of its games in a season, they are required to compete at a junior varsity level the following year. This would have been a setback for the upperclassmen of either school if they found themselves competing at the junior varsity level in their senior year.

Born from a need to survive, the two Chouteau County football programs will forego their annual contest on the gridiron and whatever rivalry remains between the two schools will be nourished from the volleyball and basketball courts or the track.

Creating and maintaining any kind of athletic co-op is never easy—ask the folks in Custer and Melstone or Broadview and Lavina. There’s much to consider in all of the messy logistics that come together to make for a successful season regardless of the win-loss record. Some of the trickier orchestrations include: coordinating transportation for practices, selecting a team mascot and colors that both schools will adopt, choosing captains without showing favor to one school over the other, making homecoming week arrangements—all of these while pulling support from the participating communities. This becomes even more challenging and complex when two hotly-contested opponents like Geraldine and Highwood are asked to work together.

Highwood Mountains Network by mdt1960
Highwood Mountains Network, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.It shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone that this first year for the Rivals will be a bumpy ride, but how well they fair in their new co-op relationship will be critical in establishing how smooth their co-op runs in future seasons. “The obvious problem with co-ops is getting kids on the same page,” according to Coach Tweet. “You’ve got two towns with their own identities and trying to blend them together takes time. I don’t know how long that really takes to get it so they think of it as one team.”

If there is one thing that might keep the bumps to a minimum, it will be the fact that the two communities have already established and maintained a co-op between their two junior high football programs for the past five years.

Even if the Geraldine-Highwood co-op is not the first, it is likely pushing the limits of daily operations required of a football team given the one-hour travel time between each school. Perhaps they can look to the six-man football co-op of Custer and Melstone for inspiration. These two schools have survived for over ten years with a 40-mile stretch of dirt road between them. But, there are casualties to consider as well, such as the short-lived Rapelje-Ryegate co-op. Rapelje now co-ops with Reed Point, while any Ryegate kids that wish to play football travel to Harlowton.

Despite the rich tradition of winning at Geraldine and Highwood, their real adversary in whether they ever bring a six-man title trophy home again might not be in the stiff competition they see each week on the gridiron, but all of the off-field logistical struggles required in maintaining a healthy and working co-op.

Postscript: The Rivals have four home games on the schedule, two will be played in Geraldine and two in Highwood.

Dubois, Wyoming: America's Newest 6-Man Gem

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12 Players, Count 'em by mdt1960
12 Players, Count 'em, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.The last time I saw a football game in Dubois, the home team could barely field an eleven-man team. There might have been three to four reserves on the sideline, and anytime a team’s bench is that thin, there’s bound to be someone who is reluctant for any action—a five-foot, four-inch, 115-pound freshman in particular.

Beginning this season, for better or worse, the Dubois Rams are amongst Wyoming’s six-man ranks. Personally, I think it’s a good fit.

Unlike many “six-man towns” I’ve visited, Dubois is a big town. In the last census, they notched 971 residents. In my travels, six-man communities are typically between 200 and 300 residents. Yet, the high school enrollment (9-12) at Dubois is a mere 54, which is right in the ballpark of a six-man program. Might we draw up a theory or two from these numbers regarding Dubois and its residents? One: there are an unusual number of households without children. Two: Many of these childless households are retired folks. Whether I’m right or wrong in my novice demographic analysis here doesn’t really matter. What matters is the Rams have a great fan base to draw on, and should they continue in winning, I suspect attendance could be daunting for home games.

Despite moving down in class, Dubois has at least one outstanding item to improve upon. Most shocking to me was the absence of game programs. Just to be sure, I asked around. I’ve seen many football games over the years in some of the poorest and smallest school districts, but never have I attended a game where programs weren’t waiting for spectators at the gate. Hopefully this was just a one-time slip up at Dubois. Small town high school football has much charm in the things that are not present, but found in larger class games. I’d like to think that missing programs are not one of those charms.

PAT4 Rattlers by mdt1960
PAT4 Rattlers, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.As it turned out, program or no program, I was pretty stoked to be attending this particular game in Dubois, nestled up to the Wind River mountain range. My excitement had nothing to do with Dubois hosting their first home game as a six-man team or the fact that the Rams were ranked number-two and were about to battle Little Snake River, the number-one ranked team. Nope, it was because the game was on Saturday.

It’s been a lament of mine for years when it comes to attending Wyoming small town high school football games. In the past, if a game wasn’t on Friday night because a school didn’t have lights, they would hold their games on Thursday or Friday afternoons—never Saturdays like Montana—which was always extremely prohibitive for me working on Fridays. Even attending a game as close as Burlington (only 40 miles away) has required some conniving and/or sacrifice in the past. But here in the last couple of years (and maybe it has something to do with the formation of the six-man class), there are more games played on Saturday afternoons. So, I’m tipping my hat to the all the schools embracing Saturday games as well as the Wyoming High School Activities Association—I’m sure they’ve had something to do with this new scheduling trend too.

By the way, this particular game at Dubois was not only on Saturday, but at 3:00 instead of 1:00—providing even more cushion for travel time.

On a final and unrelated note… What are we to make of Tongue River’s woes? Playing in Wyoming’s 2A eleven-man class, the Eagles have forfeit their season because not enough kids signed up to play.Those students who did sign up are playing down the road with their 2A rival, Big Horn.

2012 Playoff Week #5 Scores

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The 2012 Arkansas high school football season was completed last Saturday night. The last weekend of the season saw three new state champions crowned. We correctly picked the winner of all three games, but we tend to think 2 out of 3 them were just pure luck (based on the closeness of the games). In 2A, we predicted a Junction City win in a Friday night "barnburner." We were not disappointed as the Dragons won the title with a 1-point margin of victory. In 3A, we did not believe that there was a clear favorite, so a coin toss gave us Harding Academy as our pick. The 3A title game was a 4-point win for HA in a game that saw the teams put up 93 total points. It was a classic state title shootout. In 4A, the Stuttgart Ricebirds took home the state title with an impressive 3 touchdown victory over the Ozark Hillbillies. The Ricebirds were clearly the better team on Saturday and had just one stumble this season during the Lonoke game in mid-October.

Later in the month, we will have our traditional helmet salute for all the Arkansas state champions for 2012 with schedule results. Thanks for checking in with us during this fantastic 2012 football season.


4A
  • Stuttgart 28, Ozark 7

3A
  • Harding Academy 49, Glen Rose 45

2A
  • Junction City 27, Bearden 26

2012 Christmas Specials

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For all you last minute shoppers, we are providing special Christmas prices for our eBook "Saturday Morning Wake-Up Call" at Smashwords. If you have a coach or football fan on your list, here are the deals we have for you:
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Our book is normally $3.99, but you can use the coupons along with the "Give as a gift" feature at Smashwords to reduce your shopping bill for Christmas. "Saturday Morning Wake-Up Call" is also available from many other eBook retailers including Barnes & Noble, iTunes, and Sony. Here are the links to the book pages at the various retailers:
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*** ~~~ *** 
Review of "Saturday Morning Wake-Up Call" at Smashwords
Review by: Lonnie Martin on Dec. 09, 2012:starstarstarstar
The authors understanding and description of high school football was deeply educational, even without the statistics tutorial. If high school coaches read this book, understand its points and apply its lessons I believe that they will become more successful. If you are not a coach I think you will still find the story told in the book to be very interesting.
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Finally, we are a part of Operation eBook Drop. The indie authors in this program give away their eBooks to active duty service members. If you are in the service and would like a copy of our book after the free book deal above expires, please send us an email at arkansasfootballbloggers@gmail.com. You can also sign up at the Operation eBook Drop Facebook page to receive free books from almost 1500 indie authors. Finally, if you have a friend or family member that is serving, let them know about this program (and our book). We will be sure to send them a free copy.

12 Aralık 2012 Çarşamba

2012 Arkansas High School Football Champions

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7A State Champions
Fayetteville Bulldogs (10-3)
Helmet Image from MG's Helmets
  • Memphis University School (TN) 42, Fayetteville 20
  • Jefferson City (MO) 49, Fayetteville 39
  • Fayetteville 55, Muskogee (OK) 14
  • Fayetteville 27, Van Buren 13
  • Fayetteville 27, Springdale 11
  • Fayetteville 52, Rogers Heritage 21 
  • Fayetteville 29, Rogers 0
  • Fayetteville 41, Siloam Springs 7
  • Fayetteville 24, Springdale Har-Ber 21
  • Bentonville 24, Fayetteville 17
  • Fayetteville 38, Conway 17
  • Fayetteville 30, North Little Rock 28
  • Fayetteville 31, Bentonville 20

6A State Champions
Greenwood Bulldogs (14-0)
Helmet Image from MG's Helmets
  • Greenwood 47, Sallisaw (OK) 14
  • Greenwood 35, Alma 6
  • Greenwood 51, Shiloh Christian 21
  • Greenwood 56, Ft. Smith Northside 20
  • Greenwood 34, Little Rock Parkview 21
  • Greenwood 42, Little Rock Catholic 14 
  • Greenwood 55, Little Rock Hall 14
  • Greenwood 45, Ft. Smith Southside 21
  • Greenwood 49, Conway 28
  • Greenwood 42, Russellville 0
  • Greenwood 56, Little Rock Fair 14
  • Greenwood 58, Little Rock Parkview 21
  • Greenwood 42, El Dorado 39
  • Greenwood 51, Pine Bluff 44

5A State Champions
 Camden Fairview Cardinals (14-0)

Helmet Image from MG's Helmets
  • Camden Fairview 49, El Dorado 21
  • Camden Fairview 44, Hamburg 0
  • Camden Fairview 42, Warren 0
  • Camden Fairview 58, Hot Springs Lakeside 10 
  • Camden Fairview 47, White Hall 8
  • Camden Fairview 42, Magnolia 0
  • Camden Fairview 56, DeQueen 6
  • Camden Fairview 45, Hope 0
  • Camden Fairview 26, Hot Springs 7
  • Camden Fairview 21, Watson Chapel 13
  • Camden Fairview 70, Beebe 20
  • Camden Fairview 42, Alma 28
  • Camden Fairview 34, Wynne 21
  • Camden Fairview 28, Batesville 10

4A State Champions
Stuttgart Ricebirds (13-1)
Helmet Image from MG's Helmets
  • Stuttgart 49, Central Arkansas Christian 22
  • Stuttgart 34, Valley View 19
  • Stuttgart 49, Dumas 13
  • Stuttgart 40, Southside Batesville 0
  • Stuttgart 34, Heber Springs 7
  • Stuttgart 20, Newport 13
  • Stuttgart 39, Clinton 6
  • Stuttgart 24, Pine Bluff Dollarway 14 
  • Lonoke 28, Stuttgart 7
  • Stuttgart 43, Marianna 8
  • Stuttgart 54, Dardanelle 0
  • Stuttgart 27, Warren 6
  • Stuttgart 32, Prairie Grove 15
  • Stuttgart 28, Ozark 7

3A State Champions
Harding Academy Wildcats (14-0)
Helmet Image from MG's Helmets
  • Harding Academy 21, Bauxite 0
  • Harding Academy 49, Des Arc 6
  • Harding Academy 44, Episcopal Collegiate 0
  • Harding Academy 36, Rose Bud 14
  • Harding Academy 37, Bald Knob 8
  • Harding Academy 49, Riverview 20
  • Harding Academy 69, Mayflower 49
  • Harding Academy 48, Perryville 0
  • Harding Academy 34, Barton 12
  • Harding Academy 21, Smackover 14
  • Harding Academy 44, Lamar 6
  • Harding Academy 62, McGehee 33
  • Harding Academy 31, Fountain Lake 29
  • Harding Academy 49, Glen Rose 45

2A State Champions
Junction City Dragons (14-1)
Helmet Image from MG's Helmets
  • Earle 14, Junction City 7
  • Junction City 28, Rison 9
  • Junction City 20, Bearden 14
  • Junction City 49, Strong 12
  • Junction City 62, Hampton 0
  • Junction City 49, Spring Hill 0
  • Junction City 58, Woodlawn 0
  • Junction City 62, Parkers Chapel 12
  • Junction City 60, Hermitage 0
  • Junction City 49, Norphlet 0
  • Junction City 42, Marked Tree 0
  • Junction City 56, Dierks 0
  • Junction City 34, Salem 6
  • Junction City 42, Walnut Ridge 6
  • Junction City 27, Bearden 26

Autumn Habits, Ghost Teams and The Olive Garden

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Highwood, Montana
Originally uploaded by mdt1960
Every year small town high school football comes and goes. And after it’s over—like Brett Favre—I’ve told myself and others that next year I’ll likely stay behind and only attend a game or two in the 100-mile radius of home. However, unlike Favre, there’s no million-dollar contract enticing me to travel the same distances as any previous year—not even the promise of gas money.

Perhaps my want or need to stay home has much to do with the fact that I’ve been almost everywhere in the two states of Montana and Wyoming when it comes to this genre of football.

So last week, I serendipitously obtained all the schedules for Montana Class C (six and eight-man) from the website of KPAX in Missoula. (BTW: kudos to KPAX for pulling all of these schedules together in such a thorough fashion.) It didn’t take long for me to spot a game here and there that I would like to attend. The next thing I know, there’s at least one game every week that I am eyeing up through mid-October. And not long after that, the playoffs begin.

Did I mention there are 27 teams playing six-man football in Montana this year—and another 36 teams signed up for eight-man play?

Obviously I’m hooked... again. And I haven’t even seen the schedules for Wyoming or a select few locations in Idaho that are realistically out of reach.

The truth is, I haven’t attended a game everywhere in these two states, but I have had time to survey almost every small town high school football setting (i.e., driving by any given gridiron during the off-season or on my way to another game somewhere else).

I suppose this means my work is not finished—not as long as teams change from one class to another or other schools introduce new teams in the stream of play.

Which makes me reminisce about a few schools/teams that have not fielded teams in years. Whatever became of the teams and players from Willow Creek, Belfry, Brockton, Box Elder? Are they teamed up with other schools in much the same way that resulted in Brady joining Power and Dutton or how Rapelje and Ryegate split to join Reed Point and Harlowton respectively?

Well, in case there’s anyone out there reading this that might wonder what I have in mind for this season, here’s my goals...

Power-Dutton-Brady: the Titans will also play a Saturday afternoon game in Dutton. Located off the Interstate 15 north of Great Falls, there’ll be no time for yard work on that weekend.

Fromberg-Roberts: this is about as close to home as I can get. About an hour drive. Though I’ve attended plenty of Fromberg and Roberts games in the past, these settings will serve as a reprieve from the typical hours of driving while still fulfilling my need to see a game.

Tri-Cities: That would be Hobson, Moore and Judith Gap—“Tri-Towns” might be a better name. One of their home games is scheduled for the gridiron in Moore on a Saturday afternoon instead of the usual dim-lit games in Hobson on Friday nights.

Great Falls Central Catholic: This is may be one of the few places in either state where you can witness a small-town football game in a good-size city like Great Falls. It may seem odd to the readers out there, but I’ve never been able to go to the Olive Garden immediately following a Class C football game. On a related note, I see Billings Christian is fielding a six-man team this year as well—providing another venue for small town football within a metropolitan setting.

Lastly St. Regis: Another lost weekend of driving for one six-man football game. This will be the Tigers first year of six-man football.

The Waiting Game... It's Worth It

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Savage Indeed
Originally uploaded by mdt1960
Maybe it’s the excitement related to teams who have never battled one another or maybe it’s the opportunity to attend a daytime game where I’ve never been, but I find the height of the Montana Class C (both eight-man and six-man) season comes during those first two weeks of the playoffs—the first round and the quarterfinals. It’s a “rich” time in that there are still so many venues to choose from and often the outcomes are very uncertain.

With the title games on the docket this coming weekend, and the available games are now whittled down to the bare minimum (even if they are the title games), I found myself reflecting on this juncture of the football season while attending the semifinal game at Big Sandy this past weekend.

It seems with each passing year, the ongoings of the other playoff games (i.e., those that are happening at the same time) become more available—even the other classes. For example, during the Big Sandy-Savage six-man shoot-out, we were updated several times by the announcer on the progress of the eight-man game at Chinook with Power-Dutton-Brady. Later we heard updates on the score in the other six-man semifinal game between Denton and Hysham. I suppose we can credit the infusion of cell phones for this effortless flow of scores between the obscure towns of Montana and other western states.

Oddly, there came no word from the showdown at Wibaux with Drummond nor was there anything mentioned about the other class games around the state. I wondered, was this simply because the games that were reported were fairly close by? It seemed reasonable that there might be someone from Big Sandy attending the game in Chinook because their nephew was playing, or something like that. And, wouldn’t Big Sandy have sent a scout to the Denton game should the Pioneers emerge victorious, allowing the scout to call in scores while working up a fresh scouting report on the victor from that game?


Elevator Stage
Originally uploaded by mdt1960
Maybe I read too much into this little sidebar of an event. Even so, with improved and more ubiquitous technology and communications, I wonder if the day will come when we will see the scores from other six-man and eight-man games around the state posted on the scoreboards like they’ve been doing for years in the professional stadiums. It seems like a stretch here in 2010, but few of us probably thought cell phones would be so prolific a mere twenty years ago.

As the Big Sandy-Savage game was drawing to its exciting close, we were informed that Chinook had overtaken Power-Dutton-Brady in the fourth quarter and Denton was still in control of their game with Hysham. Despite all of this, after the Warriors of Savage were crowned the victors at Big Sandy, there was never another word on those other games. Walking to my truck afterwards, I kept my ears perked for that one last announcement, but it never came.

Into the Montana darkness and on to Eddie’s Corner, I remained in the metaphorical darkness as well regarding the outcome of those other games. At first I considered checking on-line via my phone to see if the scores were posted, but decided I would wait and hear about the outcomes via the old-fashioned method—reading about them in the next day’s newspapers.

I half expected to hear about one of the other games while eating my dinner at the Eddie's Corner café—given it is such a central junction in the state. If that had been the case, I would have welcomed the news.

Nevertheless, after dinner I walked out into the darkest outlying areas of the truck stop’s parking area—beyond the parked semis—climbed into my cold sleeping bag in the bed of my pickup and wondered if Chinook had indeed held their lead after claiming it late in the game. “And what about Drummond and Wibaux,” I asked myself as I set the alarm on the cell phone? Was the Rainbow Club in Wibaux jumping with delight or were they drowning their sorrows again, almost a year later after losing to Drummond at home in the title game?

In an era that is being defined for its instant gratification, I fell asleep at Eddie’s Corner content with the idea of waiting to read about the scores in the Sunday newspapers, and therefore in synch with the rhythms of small town high school football.


Going Deep
Originally uploaded by mdt1960
ShoutoutHere’s to the Big Sandy football team in giving the undefeated Warriors of Savage all they could handle. I’d especially like to salute the savvy play of sophomore quarterback Trevor Lackner. He may have thrown three interceptions in battling a swift Savage defense but he also connected two of his four touchdown passes to his “big men.” The Pioneers’ first touchdown came on a 36-yard pass to Dallas Briese—a five-foot, ten-inch, 220-pound junior and later in the game he found sophomore Kaden Beck on a 34-yard strike who stands at six-foot and tips the scales at 260 pounds. It’s doubtful that Briese and Beck could outrun any of the Warriors on the field, but it was Lackner who saw them open and had the confidence to throw in their direction.

The Rivals: Montana's New Co-op

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Six-Man Solitude by mdt1960
Six-Man Solitude, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.When it comes to playing football under the circumstances of dwindling enrollment numbers, six-man football is the ultimate story of adaptation. A school with only fifteen players could prop up an eleven-man team with the hope that injuries don’t finish off their season. However, a better scenario would be for the same team to play six-man football and have enough players to scrimmage during practice and field a respectable and competitive team.

But, what if a school doesn’t even have twelve players—enough to scrimmage in six-man? In the case of Highwood and Geraldine—two perennial powerhouses in Montana six-man play—this is exactly what happened.

Since 1988 these two six-man teams have notched 18 championship game appearances… that’s 18 of the last 23 title games. Of those 18 title games, 15 resulted in victory. In five of those title games, the two rivals faced each other.

Beginning this year, due to a decline in classroom enrollments, the high-octane rivalry of Highwood and Geraldine will transform into a six-man football co-op that is already turning heads. Lead by Geraldine’s veteran coach, Rod Tweet, the Rivals will be competing in Montana’s Six-Man Northern Conference.

Tweet is cautious about making any kind of predictions regarding his team as a state contender. “We don’t have the number of kids to compete anymore,” declared Tweet. “The kids we have are good kids, but injuries play a big role in the game. So, it’s not like we’re going to get together and have 25 kids to play football.” The Rivals started their first week of practice with 16 kids on the roster.

Talk of the merge commenced during last year’s football season. Both teams starting looking at their (already low) numbers and anticipated that each school would barely have enough to field a six-man team. The initial projections were seven players from each school. Tweet’s first discussions were with his players. “I told the boys we were at a spot where I didn’t know if we could finish the season, because injuries are part of football and we’ve had more than are fair share in the last two or three years.”

Tigers and Mountaineers by mdt1960
Tigers and Mountaineers, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.Not only was that a dismal outlook for having a competitive season, but it also threatened either program’s future should injuries force such a small-staffed football team to forfeit games. According to Montana High School Association, if a school forfeits two of its games in a season, they are required to compete at a junior varsity level the following year. This would have been a setback for the upperclassmen of either school if they found themselves competing at the junior varsity level in their senior year.

Born from a need to survive, the two Chouteau County football programs will forego their annual contest on the gridiron and whatever rivalry remains between the two schools will be nourished from the volleyball and basketball courts or the track.

Creating and maintaining any kind of athletic co-op is never easy—ask the folks in Custer and Melstone or Broadview and Lavina. There’s much to consider in all of the messy logistics that come together to make for a successful season regardless of the win-loss record. Some of the trickier orchestrations include: coordinating transportation for practices, selecting a team mascot and colors that both schools will adopt, choosing captains without showing favor to one school over the other, making homecoming week arrangements—all of these while pulling support from the participating communities. This becomes even more challenging and complex when two hotly-contested opponents like Geraldine and Highwood are asked to work together.

Highwood Mountains Network by mdt1960
Highwood Mountains Network, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.It shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone that this first year for the Rivals will be a bumpy ride, but how well they fair in their new co-op relationship will be critical in establishing how smooth their co-op runs in future seasons. “The obvious problem with co-ops is getting kids on the same page,” according to Coach Tweet. “You’ve got two towns with their own identities and trying to blend them together takes time. I don’t know how long that really takes to get it so they think of it as one team.”

If there is one thing that might keep the bumps to a minimum, it will be the fact that the two communities have already established and maintained a co-op between their two junior high football programs for the past five years.

Even if the Geraldine-Highwood co-op is not the first, it is likely pushing the limits of daily operations required of a football team given the one-hour travel time between each school. Perhaps they can look to the six-man football co-op of Custer and Melstone for inspiration. These two schools have survived for over ten years with a 40-mile stretch of dirt road between them. But, there are casualties to consider as well, such as the short-lived Rapelje-Ryegate co-op. Rapelje now co-ops with Reed Point, while any Ryegate kids that wish to play football travel to Harlowton.

Despite the rich tradition of winning at Geraldine and Highwood, their real adversary in whether they ever bring a six-man title trophy home again might not be in the stiff competition they see each week on the gridiron, but all of the off-field logistical struggles required in maintaining a healthy and working co-op.

Postscript: The Rivals have four home games on the schedule, two will be played in Geraldine and two in Highwood.

Dubois, Wyoming: America's Newest 6-Man Gem

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12 Players, Count 'em by mdt1960
12 Players, Count 'em, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.The last time I saw a football game in Dubois, the home team could barely field an eleven-man team. There might have been three to four reserves on the sideline, and anytime a team’s bench is that thin, there’s bound to be someone who is reluctant for any action—a five-foot, four-inch, 115-pound freshman in particular.

Beginning this season, for better or worse, the Dubois Rams are amongst Wyoming’s six-man ranks. Personally, I think it’s a good fit.

Unlike many “six-man towns” I’ve visited, Dubois is a big town. In the last census, they notched 971 residents. In my travels, six-man communities are typically between 200 and 300 residents. Yet, the high school enrollment (9-12) at Dubois is a mere 54, which is right in the ballpark of a six-man program. Might we draw up a theory or two from these numbers regarding Dubois and its residents? One: there are an unusual number of households without children. Two: Many of these childless households are retired folks. Whether I’m right or wrong in my novice demographic analysis here doesn’t really matter. What matters is the Rams have a great fan base to draw on, and should they continue in winning, I suspect attendance could be daunting for home games.

Despite moving down in class, Dubois has at least one outstanding item to improve upon. Most shocking to me was the absence of game programs. Just to be sure, I asked around. I’ve seen many football games over the years in some of the poorest and smallest school districts, but never have I attended a game where programs weren’t waiting for spectators at the gate. Hopefully this was just a one-time slip up at Dubois. Small town high school football has much charm in the things that are not present, but found in larger class games. I’d like to think that missing programs are not one of those charms.

PAT4 Rattlers by mdt1960
PAT4 Rattlers, a photo by mdt1960 on Flickr.As it turned out, program or no program, I was pretty stoked to be attending this particular game in Dubois, nestled up to the Wind River mountain range. My excitement had nothing to do with Dubois hosting their first home game as a six-man team or the fact that the Rams were ranked number-two and were about to battle Little Snake River, the number-one ranked team. Nope, it was because the game was on Saturday.

It’s been a lament of mine for years when it comes to attending Wyoming small town high school football games. In the past, if a game wasn’t on Friday night because a school didn’t have lights, they would hold their games on Thursday or Friday afternoons—never Saturdays like Montana—which was always extremely prohibitive for me working on Fridays. Even attending a game as close as Burlington (only 40 miles away) has required some conniving and/or sacrifice in the past. But here in the last couple of years (and maybe it has something to do with the formation of the six-man class), there are more games played on Saturday afternoons. So, I’m tipping my hat to the all the schools embracing Saturday games as well as the Wyoming High School Activities Association—I’m sure they’ve had something to do with this new scheduling trend too.

By the way, this particular game at Dubois was not only on Saturday, but at 3:00 instead of 1:00—providing even more cushion for travel time.

On a final and unrelated note… What are we to make of Tongue River’s woes? Playing in Wyoming’s 2A eleven-man class, the Eagles have forfeit their season because not enough kids signed up to play.Those students who did sign up are playing down the road with their 2A rival, Big Horn.

11 Aralık 2012 Salı

Northern Guilford leads Charlotte Catholic 29-14 at halftime

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Northern Guilford leadsCharlotte Catholic 29-14 at halftime.
Northern Guilford took lessthan a minute to get on the scoreboard. Running back TJ Logan scored on a46-yard reverse to give the Nighthawks a 7-0 lead.
Turnovers hurt Catholic in the first half.
A fumble by Ryan Miller ended Catholic’s second drive of thegame and a fumbled punt in the second quarter gave Northern Guilford the ball 31 yards from the end zone.
Loganscored two plays later on a 27-yard run to give the Nighthawks a 14-0 lead with11:07 left in the half.
Charlotte Catholic found the end zone on the next driveafter a 42-yard pass from Miller to Tyler Pumneo set up a 12-yard touchdown runfor Elijah Hood, making the score 14-7 with 9:19 left in the second quarter.
The two teams traded touchdowns for the rest of the half.
Northern Guilford scored ona 1-yard Coltrane run with 5:58 left in the half.
Charlotte Catholic’s next touchdown came on a trick playwith Miller dropping back as if to pass and pitching the ball to a waiting DrewTomsho, who went 23 yards for a score.
That score cut the Nighthawk lead to 21-14 with 1:47 left inthe half.
Loganwas in the end zone 12 seconds later for his third score of the night on a80-yard run. A two-point conversion gave Northern Guilforda 29-14 lead at half.
Loganhad 169 yards on 9 carries with three touchdowns in the first half. Nighthawkquarterback Austin Coltrane was 3-for-3 with 83 yards.
Hood had 108 yards on 22 carries and one touchdown for theCougars. Miller was 2-for-2 passing for 60 yards. 

Post-game comments from Charlotte Catholic's loss in the NCHSAA 3AA championship

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I wasn't able to get quotes into the print version of my story about Charlotte Catholic's loss to Northern Guilford in the NCHSAA 3AA championship game Saturday. The game started 45 minutes late and deadline loomed just minutes after the clock hit zero.

I did rush down to the media room after and added quotes to the online version of the story, which you can find here. 
Here are other notable post-game comments from both teams:

Charlotte Catholic

Head coach Jim Oddo:

Opening statement:
“We picked a bad day to have a bad day.”
[...]
“Really, we hung with them for a half and right at the close of the first half we drove theball down the field and scored and were in it and then with just a little bit of time left hepopped a long one and I think that was the one that kind of broke our back.”
[...]
“I thought our kids played hard and we’re very happy to be here, but sorry that it wasn’t abetter game. But I’m proud of our young men and what they’ve done.”

On the uncharacteristic mistakes his team made:
“We turned it over too much early in the ball game. … When things went south, they wentsouth and then it snow balled.”

On Northern Guilford running back T.J. Logan:
“We knew that he was going to pop one or two. There’s no way you can hold him downfor a whole ball game and I expected that somewhere along the line he’d get off oneor two. I didn’t expect he’d get off that many, but, you know, that’s the way it is. He’san outstanding athlete. Blinding speed. And if you don’t get him tied up at the line ofscrimmage or close to it, half the time he’s going to take it to the house.”

On if Charlotte Catholic's offensive style makes it harder to come back from an early deficit:
“Our big problem was we rely on some base plays and they were able to take them away.We were not able to do what we wanted to do. We were still getting four and three andgetting first downs and matriculating down field and shortening the game, but it doesn't take them very long to hand the ball to Logan to bounce back.”
[...]
“They just bunched them up and we weren’t good enough to take it to them. And we're not going to pass every down.”

Running back Elijah Hood:

On what he hopes to take away from the game, going into his senior year:
"I mean, it's kind of a sour experience but I'm just going to use that to move on. I mean, I'm going to keep growing as a football player. Obviously there were some things in that game I could have probably did better. I probably missed some blocks, I've got to go watch some film and stuff.
"There's a lot for me to learn, so I'm just trying to learn from it. Football is a learning experience so I'm just going to keep learning, try to get better, that's the way I see it.
"Because I've got another year, I'm going to go back at it, so I'm just going to go ahead and go for the state championship next year. Same heart, same passion, same drive. Work harder. That's all I can give, give it my all."  
Northern Guilford
Head coach Johnny Roscoe: 
“We said defense was going to have to win a game for us and they did. They containedtheir running attack.”

Talking about the players sitting at the media table with him:
“These guys have been here four years with us and this is our program, right here in frontof you.”

On if he was surprised by Catholic's miscues, like fumbled punts:
“They made very few mistakes and that gave us an advantage. It really did. …It’s an outstanding football game. We knew what they were coming to do. … We knewwhat was in store. 34 (Elijah Hood) is an outstanding player, the offensive line did a good job and wehad to come in and defensively do something.”

On the importance of Northern Guilford's two quick scores before and after the half:
“It was so important. … the movement of the game goes back and forth so many times… It’s so important to stop their momentum because we saw them on film, certain teamswould stop them and then, bam they’d get an 80 yard run, a 70 yard run, a 60, and so weknew that they were going to make some runs at us and we were going to have to justtake care of those and move the ball offensively.”

Running back T.J. Logan:

On what helped him have such a big game:
“The O-line. I feel like in practice they opened up a lot of holes and I just try tohit the seam.”
[...]
“They were just like over pursuing a little bit so I could just cut to the back side.”

On his response to Charlotte Catholic fans who might say they Nighthawks were running up the score:
“It’s just football. You play to the end.”

On how it felt to finish an undefeated season with a state championship:
“It feels good. We’ve been playing together since like the seventh grade."
[...]
“This is perfect.”

On what he would say to fans of North Carolina, where he's committed to play next year:
“I’m ready. I’m ready for Tar Heel nation.”

Defensive lineman Austin Simmons:

On how playing in past state championship games helped the team this year:
“It helped us get ready for the noise and the level of competition. Every player, like theseniors on their team, it was their last game so they were going to play as hard as they can. So we were ready to face their best. Film can’t prepare us for how well they’re going toplay when they’re ready just to give their all.”

Beth Erb breaks Country Day's career scoring record

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Charlotte Country Day senior girls' basketball player Beth Erb broke the school's girls' basketball scoring record in a Dec. 5 game against Parkwood.

Erb scored 12 points in the 47-36 loss, giving her 1,170 career points with the Buccaneers. The previous record was 1,164 points held by Janice Roberts, a 2010 graduate now playing at Furman.

Erb also had 3 rebounds, two steals and two assists in the game.

George Whitfield's baseball clinic scheduled for Jan. 12

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The baseball clinic run by North Carolina High School Athletic Association Hall of Famer George Whitfield is set for its 41st annual renewal.

The clinic is scheduled for Goldsboro High School on Saturday, January 12, 2013 and features another tremendous lineup. Registration is scheduled from 7:30 to 9:00 a.m, and then the clinic will run until 6 p.m.

The clinic is open to all players from Little League through high school, and all coaches at any level are welcome.

Ron Polk, the assistant baseball coach at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, will be the kickoff speaker at 9:05 am, followed by Dr. Chris Hasty and Trey Mooring, who will speak on injury prevention for today's baseball players.

Here are some of the other outstanding baseball people and topics that will be covered at this annual event:

• “What College Coaches Are Looking for in Today’s Athletes” will be discussed by UNC-Greensboro assistant coach Matt Boykin, East Carolina head coach Billy Godwin, Georgia Southern assistant Chris Moore, Liberty assistant Garrett Quinn and Louisburg College head coach Keith Shumate.

•”Practice Organization for the High School Coach” will include Tony Guzzo, head coach at Nash Central High School, and Appalachian State head coach Billy Jones.

• "Indoor and On-Field Drills To Become a Better Player” will be presented by Campbell head coach Greg Goff, Richmond assistant coaches Tag Montague and Tanner Biagini, and Mount Olive assistant Rob Watt.

• Pitching will be covered by Shenandoah University head coach Kevin Anderson, Pitt Community College head coach Tommy Eason, North Carolina assistant coach Scott Forbes; Sam Narron, pitching coach for the Auburn Doubledays in the Washington National minor league organization; and Dan Roszel, East Carolina assistant coach.

•Catching will feature Virginia Commonwealth assistant Kurt Elbin, Eastern Wayne High School head coach James Fulghum, Duke assistant J.J. Jordan, Virginia assistant Matt Kirby, and Virginia Military Institute assistant Michael Roberts. • Infield play instructors will be Central Florida retired head coach Jay Bergman, UNC-Wilmington head coach Mark Scalf, Brunswick Community College head coach Robbie Allen, U.S. Military Academy assistant coach Matt Reid, and Michigan assistant Nick Schnabel.

• Outfield play will be covered by Methodist head coach Tom Austin; retired Ohio University head coach Joe Carbone; Paul Faulk, a scout for the Washington Nationals; Mount Olive head coach Carl Lancaster, and East Carolina assistant Ben Sanderson.

• Base Running will be discussed by Dave Bristol, former major league manager with the Reds, Brewers, Braves and Giants; Catawba head coach Jim Gantt; High Point assistant Bryan Peters, UNC-Asheville head coach Tom Smith and Wake Forest head coach Tom Walter.

• Hitting instructors will be retired Virginia Tech head coach Chuck Hartman; Campbell assistant Justin Haire, College of Charleston assistant Matt Heath, UNC-Greensboro head coach Link Jarrett, and N.C. State assistant Brian Ward.

Coach Whitfield will mail information to schools across the state in November. The only charge for the clinic is a pre-registration fee of $60 per person, which includes lunch. Any school or team that registers six or more people will be charged $50 per person.

Registration at the door will be $70.

Players 15 years of age and under may have their fathers attend for free, and they can eat lunch for just seven dollars.

Questions about the clinic may be directed to George at (919) 778-6013 or write him at 216 Hardingwood Drive, Goldsboro, NC 27534.

--NCHSAA release