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Chantilly High School | Archive | November, 2008

Virginia AAA Division 6 Semifinal: Oscar Smith 10, Oakton 7

By Greg Young, 2008 Annandale Graduate
 and Jeffery Gibert, West Potomac Senior
Digital Sports Interns

DigitalSports coverage of the 2008 Football Playoffs is proudly brought to you by Dynamic Sports Performance of Northern Virginia

*Check the tabs on the top-left of the article for complete video highlights and a photo gallery from Saturday’s playoff game*
 
With less than six minutes left in the fourth quarter of Oakton’s Virginia AAA Division 6 state semifinal against visiting — and heavily favored — Oscar Smith, the Cougars looked primed-and-ready to pull off a stunning upset.
 
The Cougars and Tigers, a highly-regarded football program from Chesapeake that gave Westfield its only challenge on it’s road to the state championship last year, were tied with one touchdown a piece and Oakton had driven to Oscar Smith’s 15-yard line. All the Cougars had to do was run out the clock and kick a field goal to secure a berth into next week’s state finale.
 
Oakton ran a seemingly fail-safe draw play, but things were horribly wrong. Oscar Smith defensive end Jamar Graves went around the block, entered the backfield and stripped the ball.

And, as it turned out, he helped spark Oscar Smith to a 10-7 victory and its own date in that state finale.
 
“Graves is an all-state defensive end,” Tigers’ Coach Richard Morgan said. “It was huge. But that’s what good teams do.”
 
After that turnover, Oscar Smith not only had the ball but also plenty of time for one final drive. As they had all game, the Tigers went to its star wide receiver, Tim Smith, who had a huge 35-yard catch with two minutes remaining to put his team inside the Cougars’ 5-yard line. From there, kicker Ryan Trotman connected from 24 yards away for the game-winning score.

Smith, who will attend the University of Virginia next season on an athletic scholarship, finished with eight catches for 140 yards and accounted for Oscar Smith’s only touchdown on the day.
 
“Me and Tim do this all of the time,” said Phillip Sims, the junior quarterback for the Tigers who completed 19-of-33 passes for 243 yards. “I gave him the opportunity; he made the play. So when he made the catch, I was relieved, but I knew he was going to do it all of the time.”
 
Smith reflected the same sentiment, saying he promised that if Sims threw the ball up to him he would, “come down with it.”
 
Although Oscar Smith had its lowest point total of the season, it stayed in the game with a stout defense. They held Oakton to 250 total yards, and limited backup quarterback Ryan Harris to 95 yards passing and one touchdown, which came with 2 minutes, 49 second left in the first half.

Harris was forced to enter the game when dynamic Oakton senior quarterback Chris Coyer was knocked unconscious during the first quarter of play and never returned.  
 
Coyer was carted off in a stretcher after being down on the field for more than 15 minutes and was taken to the hospital.

The extent of his injuries — which Coyer suffered when he was sandwiched between a pair of Oscar Smith defenders and one of them inadvertently hit him in the head — are unknown. But he was alert when he left the field and did have both feeling and movement in his extremities.
 
For Oscar Smith, the win was the first time since 1998 that a team has gone into a Northern Region stadium and won, a fact that was not lost on the team afterwards.

“There have been a lot of great teams from the Eastern Region that have come up here and lost,” Morgan said. “Getting this win is huge and it proves what a good football team we are.”

Despite the three-and-a-half hour drive, Oscar Smith fans filled their opposing section, creating an atmosphere that the team said was very friendly.
 
“It was crazy,” Smith said. “We had a lot of fans that came out. [I was] surprised about that, so our stands were packed when we got here and warmin’ up, so that was a good thing.”
 
Meanwhile, Oakton’s storybook season ends at 13-1. Although they were heavy underdogs against a traditionally strong Oscar Smith team, the Cougars led the Tigers at half time, 7-0.  
 
“They played just like we thought they would,” Morgan said. “They are tough, they played disciplined and they played well.”

Oscar Smith is currently #11 in the USA Today High School football poll and will face Osbourn for the state title in Blacksburg on Saturday.
 
“We are definitely ready,” Sims said. “We are going to go out there, play our hardest, and we’ll see what happens.”

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Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By: Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager/DigitalSports.com

**Click HERE to see complete highlights from this past Friday night’s playoff game!

Senior Chris Coyer accounted for five touchdowns in the Northern Region championship game Saturday as Oakton routed visiting Chantilly 52-14 earning himself the Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week award.

“We played really well as a team” said Coyer before heading to practice. “Our preparation and everything throughout the week was great. We had a great team effort and came out with the win.”

The all-district quarterback scored three times on the ground with runs of 4, 2 and 1 yards respectively and had touchdown passes from 50 and 7 yards. Coyer finished the day with 184 yards on 9-of-15 passing and 42-yards rushing.

The undefeated Cougars will once again play at home Saturday at 1:30 as nationally ranked and also unbeaten Eastern Region champ Oscar Smith comes to town.
  


Click here for a complete list of winners


Cox Communications is proud to serve the residents of Fairfax County, and is honored to present the Cox ON DEMAND High School Performer of the Week trophy award to the standout player from a Fairfax County team weekly.


Please send nominations to awatts@digitalsports.com

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Northern Region Football Top 10 — Week 13

Northern

Region Football Top 10 — Week 13

1. Stone Bridge (13-0)
    Previous ranking:
1
    Last week: defeated Edison, 35-6
    Up next: at Phoebus in Virginia AAA Division 5 state semifinal, 1:30 p.m. Saturday
    Directions: Click here for directions to Darling Stadium in Hampton, VA
2. Oakton (13-0)
    Previous

ranking: 2
    Last week: defeated Chantilly, 52-15
   

Up next: vs Oscar Smith in Virginia AAA Division 6 state semifinal, 1:30 p.m. Saturday
3. Edison (12-1)
    Previous ranking: 3
    Last week: lost to Stone Bridge, 35-6
    Up next: Season complete
4. Chantilly (9-4)
   

Previous ranking: 4
    Last week: lost to Oakton, 52-14
    Up next: Season complete
5. Westfield (9-3)
    Previous ranking: 5
    Up next: Season complete
6. West Springfield (8-4)
   
Previous ranking:
6
    Up next: Season complete
7. Mount Vernon (9-3)
   
Previous ranking:
7
    Up next: Season complete
8.  Annandale (7-4)

    Previous ranking: 8

    Up next: Season complete
9. W.T. Woodson (7-4)
    Previous ranking: 9
    Up next: Season complete
10. Madison (7-5)
    Previous ranking: 10
    Up next: Season complete

**

DigitalSports’ Top 10 is chosen by staff members Angela Watts, Jimmy
Thomas and Phil Murphy.

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Division 6 Championship: Oakton 52, Chantilly 14

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, Washington D.C. Metro Area


*CLICK HERE for 418 pre-game, in-game and post-game photos.

*CLICK HERE for over 50 videos highlights, plus four post-game interviews.

Both
No. 2 Oakton and No. 4 Chantilly stretched and jogged in their
respective end zones before the start of the second half with the loud
speakers blaring on Saturday.

As one anthem blended into the
next, Oakton trotted to-and-fro, in neat patterns of seven players with
the result of the Division 6 Northern Region championship game already
secured.

The Cha Cha Slide started — belting out dance
instructions — to the audible joy of the pep band and fans. And then
the Cougars joined in.

Dozens of players, bloodied and battered
with chalk caked to their Goosebump-covered skin, stepped in unison,
jumping once, twice — five times — on command, with a care-free
attitude atypical of team known for its stoic, mechanical way of
submitting opponents.

But it was that looseness that propelled
Oakton on the brisk afternoon in Vienna, as the Cougars provided their
most dominant performance of the season, scoring the first 52 points of
the game en route to a 52-14 win over the Chargers.

“Doing the Cha Cha Slide after half time is just kind of our thing,” said senior quarterback Chris Coyer,
with an ever-thickening playoff beard. “We just always do that to keep
us loose and I think it’s good for the team … You can’t be too
uptight for the game.”

Added Oakton linebacker and captain Joey McCallum:
“We’ve done that every game this year and we’ve almost gotten flagged
for it a couple times. We just love football, every one of us. We love
being out here and having the best time we can.

“Being up 45-0 at half helps, too.”

As
it had all year, Oakton — recognized for its balance more than any
other team — marched down the field at will on Saturday.

Its first
eight offensive possessions ended in points. Coyer accounted for five
of the Cougars’ seven touchdowns, completing 9-of-15 passes for 184
yards and two scores.

He also carried nine times for 42 yards in three touchdowns, all of which came before half time.

“We’ve
all put so much work and effort into this season to get where we are,”
said Coyer, the Concorde District Offensive Player of the Year. “A lot
of people put as underdogs coming into this game.

“We wanted to come out
and show everyone that we’re the best team in this region.”

The
reason some media outlets pegged the Cougars as underdogs stood at a
generous 5-feet, 10-inches, 220-pounds in the Charger backfield.

Chantilly senior running back Torrian Pace
had been an historic playoff tear, rushing for 723 yards and nine
scores, in addition to a 53-yard touchdown reception, in only two
playoff games.

But Pace was held to his second-lowest rushing total of the season, 105 yards on 18 carries.

And
had it not been for a 63-yard, third-quarter touchdown run, he would
have been kept below his previous season-low, 87 yards, set on October
3 against Oakton (13-0).

“Even though we did a good job stopping
West Springfield’s running game, we still felt we had a lot to prove,”
said McCallum, who had three tackles for loss. “A lot of people were
doubting us, doubting our ability to stop Torrian Pace and that great
O-line. Everyone did their job.

“If everyone does their job, you build a brick wall and you stop them.”

Added Chantilly head coach Mike Lalli,
whose team finished the year at 9-4: “[Oakton] didn’t turn the ball
over. They didn’t make penalties. They played very disciplined
football. We didn’t come out really sharp. 

“And by the time we [fixed it], it was too late. The avalanche had already begun.”

Oakton
is set to face its toughest test yet next week at home against Oscar
Smith, the Eastern Region champions, in the AAA State semifinals on
Saturday.

The Tigers (13-0) have outscored their opponents
553-85 this season. They are ranked No. 7 in the nation in the ESPNRise
poll and No. 9 on Rivals.com, higher than any other team in the
Mid-Atlantic states.

Last year, as a sophomore, Tiger quarterback Phillip Sims
threw for a state-tournament record 480 yards — 72 yards more than the
previous all-time high — in Oscar Smith’s 24-21 loss to Westfield.

It was the undefeated Bulldogs’ only game decided by fewer than 12 points in their state championship run.

“I haven’t seen them yet, so I’m not exactly sure what they do,” said senior linebacker Jack Tyler,
the Concorde District Defensive Player of the Year. “But I’m sure our
coaches will put us in great position to win and all we’ll have to do
is execute.”

Added senior running back Trey Watts: “We have to prepare like they’re the best team in the nation. But we have to prepare like we can get the job done.”

No. 4 Chantilly        0    0    7    7  — 14
No. 2 Oakton         21  24   7    0  — 52

Scoring Summary
1Q — OK — Coyer 4 run (Goins kick) — 7:06
1Q — OK — Meadows 27 run (Goins kick) — 4:03
1Q — OK — Chandler 50 from Coyer (Goins kick) — 1:41
2Q — OK — Coyer 2 run (Goins kick) — 8:57
2Q — OK — Coyer 1 run (Goins kick) — 6:45
2Q — OK — Watts 22 run (Goins kick) — 2:01
2Q — OK — Goins 28 FG — 0:00
3Q — OK — Watts 7 from Coyer (Goins kick) — 6:26
3Q — CH — Pace 63 run (Abott kick) — 4:49
4Q — CH — Vaughn 49 from Strittmatter (Abott kick) — 7:53

Individual Leaders
Passing
CH — Strittmatter 8-of-16 passing, 86 yards, TD, 2 INT. OK — Coyer 9-of-15 passing, 184 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INT.
Rushing
CH — Pace 18 carries, 105 yards, TD; McGrath 8 carries, 24 yards. OK — Meadows 18 carries, 105 yards, TD; Watts 7 carries, 47 yards, TD; Coyer 9 carries, 42 yards, 3 TDs (all first half).
Receiving
CH — Vaughn 2 receptions, 53 yards, TD; Ryan 3 receptions, 14
yards; A.J. Johnson 2 receptions, 14 yards. OK — Harris 2 receptions, 62 yards; Watts 5 receptions, 44 yards; TD; Chandler 1 receptions, 50 yards, TD; Reynolds 1 reception, 28 yards.
Third-Down Conversions
CH — 3-for-11. OK 6-for-11.
Fourth-Down Conversions

CH — 1-for-4. OK 3-for-4.

E-mail: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Football: A Weekend Preview — Division 6 Regional Final

Division 6 Northern Region Final                                                 
No. 3 Chantilly (9-3) at No. 1 Oakton (12-0) — November 22 at 1:30 p.m.
HISTORY
For eight straight seasons, a Concorde District team has participated
in the Division 6 state championship game. So there will be no
Cinderella sentiment when the Chargers and Cougars meet for the second
time this season.

Oakton is in its third Northern Region championship game since 2004. Chantilly, who went 0-10 in Coach Mike Lalli‘s inauguarl season in 2004, has reached the regional final twice in that span.

These teams have met 10 times this decade, each school having won five
games. The Chargers hold the scoring edge in those meetings, 174-160,
which amounts to a whopping 1.4 points per game.

The Cougars were on the right side of that minuscule margin most
recently, a 17-15 victory on October 3. That was the closest win for
unbeaten Oakton this year.

The Chargers have the only playoff win between the teams in that span,
23-14 at home, in their state championship game run two years ago.

It will be interesting to see how much bearing the two-point Oakton win
from October and the tight series history will have on Saturday
afternoon.

QUARTERBACKS

The Cougars get the edge at the quarterback position; there are two of them! Concorde District offensive player of the year Chris Coyer
has over 1,100 yards passing and over 1,000 rushing yards to lead the
Oakton spread offense. He’s also accounted for 26 touchdowns — 15
passing and 10 rushing — including four throwing and two on the ground
in last week’s 49-43 win over West Springfield.

Senior Ryan Harris enters after
three drives to provide a change of pace for the Cougars and allow
Coyer to line up out wide. Harris has accounted for nearly 700 yards of
offense this season, so he can’t be dismissed as a threat.

The Chargers feature a first-year starter under center in senior Roger Strittmatter,
a transfer from Paul VI. Even though he’s only thrown for 793 yards and
nine touchdowns to six interceptions this season, he’s shown some
definite maturity in the team’s biggest games.

Last week, with running back Torrian Pace sidelined on the game-winning drive with an ankle injury, Strittmatter found wide receiver Chris Vaughn
for 15 yards on 3rd-and-5 with under five minutes remaining to keep the
chains moving in what proved a 35-28 win over defending state champion
Westfield. Strittmatter is averaging 15.5 yards per completion and
recorded one of his three 100-yard passing games came against Oakton.

RUNNING BACKS
The Cougars feature a tailback duo that’s tough to contain — let alone
stop — but no one anywhere has better hotter than Charger senior
Torrian Pace.

Pace has — brace yourself — 777 all-purpose yards and 10 touchdowns
in the last two playoff games. He carried 34 times for 356 yards and
all five Chantilly touchdowns last week in the Westfield win. Against
the usually sure-tackling Bulldog defensive front, Pace was a bull,
churning out the extra yard — or 30 — on every touch.

Pace has a Northern Region-high 2,468 yards and 36 touchdowns this
season. That means his average game is 206 yards and three scores.

The maroon and gold, though, give Pace a run for his money. Senior Trey Watts
is the definition of dual-threat with 577 rushing yards and a team-high
615 receiving yards, accounting for 21 touchdowns. Senior speedster Johnny Meadows, who runs with his trademark towel flapping along his left thigh, leads the Cougars with 749 rushing yards and 10 scores.

Pace’s lowest rushing total of the season by far, 87 yards, came
against Oakton earlier this year. Only once outside of that game was he
kept below 150 on the ground.

WIDE RECEIVERS
Chantilly has the advantage at wide receiver, simply because Oakton’s
top receiver, Watts, comes out of the backfield. But beyond that,
senior tight end Mike Ryan
is the most unsung piece of the Charger puzzle. He only has two
touchdowns this season and both of those came against Fairfax, a game
which accounted for over 40-percent of his 249 receiving yards this
year.

But in 3rd-and-medium situations on Saturday, the stout Cougar defense
— to be praised momentarily — will be stacking the box against No.
25. A completion or two to Chantilly’s sure-handed tight end — a
staple of the Charger offense for four seasons — will keep Oakton
honest and give Pace the breathing room he needs to break out.

DEFENSE
Defense couldn’t be more integral to winning. The top five scoring
defenses were the top five teams in the DigitalSports Top Ten entering
last week. Oakton is third in the Northern Region — tops in Division 6
— allowing 16.8 points per game. Not far behind, Chantilly gives up
18.3 points per game, 0.2 points behind fourth-place Westfield.

But the Cougar linebacking corps makes the difference. Seniors Joey McCallum, Kenny Hanson and Jack Tyler
anchor the most versatile — and violent — group around. All three can
both swarm the run and swat down passes when called upon.

The Oakton secondary has bent, but not broken all year. Senior Joey Kopfman and junior Andrew Leonard — along with Tyler — are among the Northern Region leaders in interceptions.

SPECIAL TEAMS

This aspect is dead even. Both teams feature explosive return men — Watts for Oakton and senior Michael Fries for Chantilly — and both have reliable options at kicker.

Junior Ray Goins is rock-solid on extra points and has enough range to hit from 35 yards on field goals. Chantilly turned to senior punter Ryan Abott for extra points after Week 4, but keeps senior Scott Puschell
for field goals. Puschell’s leg is a little stronger than Goins’, but
the Cougar kicker has the edge in the accuracy department.

***

The obvious tendency is to favor the undefeated team. And talking to
coaches and writers around the Northern Region, most are assuming an
Oscar Smith at Oakton state semifinal next weekend.

But remember, the Chargers were two points from overcoming a 17-point
halftime deficit to the Cougars in Week 6. Chantilly’s three losses are
to teams with a combined 33-3 record — two of those three teams are
still alive and undefeated, including Oakton.

And it was two years ago that a three-loss Charger team that went to
unbeaten — and seemingly untouchable — Westfield, only to ride a
back-up quarterback and two underclassmen running backs to a 26-21 win.
One of those two tailbacks was Pace.

Oakton returned 18 starters from last season and has been on the short
list of probable regional championships since August. It is likely the
favorite for Saturday’s game on paper. However, during this postseason,
Chantilly has been, quite frankly, as solid as a rock.

But remember: More often than not, paper covers rock.

E-mail: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager, Northern Region

**Click HERE to see complete highlights from this past Friday night’s playoff game!

Senior Stephon Robertson is the Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week after leading undefeated Edison to a 47-7 win over Madison in a Northern Region Division 5 semifinal last week.

Robertson, the National District Defensive Player of the Year, ran for 136 yards and three touchdowns on just 11 carries against the Warhawks — in one half of action — and added eight tackles on defense. 

Edison will meet also undefeated and top-ranked Stone Bridge, the defending Virginia AAA Division 5 state champions, for the fourth consecutive time in the Division 5 title game at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Edison.

“It’s going to be one of the greatest games in the state that night,” said Robertson about the big match-up. “I can guarantee you.

“We have two undefeated teams going head-to-head. They have a great offense; we have a great offense. They have a great defense; we have a great defense. And so it’s going to be a battle on both sides of the ball.”

Click here for a complete list of winners

Cox Communications is proud to serve the residents of Fairfax County, and is honored to present the Cox ON DEMAND High School Performer of the Week trophy award to the standout player from a Fairfax County team weekly.

Please send nominations to awatts@digitalsports.com

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Northern Region Football Top 10 — Week 12

Northern

Region Football Top 10 — Week 12

1. Stone Bridge (12-0)
    Previous ranking:
1
    Last week: defeated Mount Vernon, 42-0
    Up next: at No. 3 Edison in Division 5 championship game, 7:30 p.m. Friday
2. Oakton (12-0)
    Previous

ranking: 2
    Last week: defeated West Springfield, 49-43
   

Up next: vs No. 4 Chantilly in Division 6 championship game, 1:30 p.m. Saturday
3. Edison (12-0)
    Previous ranking: 3
    Last week: defeated Madison, 47-7
    Up next: vs No. 1 Stone Bridge in Division 5 championship game, 7:30 p.m. Friday
4. Chantilly (9-3)
   

Previous ranking: 5
    Last week: defeated Westfield, 35-28
    Up next: at No. 2 Oakton in Division 6 championship game, 1:30 p.m. Saturday
5. Westfield (9-3)
    Previous ranking: 4
    Last week: lost to Chantilly, 35-28
    Up next: Season complete
6. West Springfield (8-4)
   
Previous ranking:
6
    Last week: lost to Oakton, 49-43
    Up next: Season complete
7. Mount Vernon (9-3)
   
Previous ranking:
7
    Last week: lost to Stone Bridge, 42-0
    Up next: Season complete
8.  Annandale (7-4)

    Previous ranking: 8

    Up next: Season complete
9. W.T. Woodson (7-4)
    Previous ranking: 10
    Up next: Season complete
10. Madison (7-5)
    Previous ranking: 9
    Last week: lost to Edison, 47-7
    Up next: Season complete

**

DigitalSports’ Top 10 is chosen by staff members Angela Watts, Jimmy
Thomas and Phil Murphy.

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Playoff Football: No. 5 Chantilly 35, No. 4 Westfield 28

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, Washington D.C. Metro Area

*CLICK HERE for 50+ video highlights.

*CLICK HERE for dozens of photos.

Westfield’s 25-point win at Chantilly in Week 4 — and the Chargers’
first-round playoff exit last season — have caused many to question
whether this is still the premiere rivalry in the Northern Region.

Not anymore.

Charger senior running back Torrian Pace
dashed seven yards for the game-winning touchdown — his fifth — with
2 minutes, 5 seconds remaining as No. 5 Chantilly knocked off defending
Virginia AAA Division 6 state champion and fourth-ranked Westfield,
35-28, on the road in a region semifinal.

With the win, the Chargers advance to their second Northern Region championship in the past three seasons.

“This feels so great,” screamed senior lineman Sam Dietze,
with a coup of elated teammates dragging him away. “I want to give
props to all my teammates. We stuck together. This is brotherhood.”

For
the second straight week, Chantilly rode the legs of its workhorse
senior tailback to victory. Pace carried 34 times for 356 yards and all
five Charger touchdowns on Friday. That came only a week after rushing
34 times for 368 yards and four scores, plus a 53-yard receiving
touchdown, in Chantilly’s 47-38 win over Annandale.

Pace has amassed 2,468 yards and 36 touchdowns in 12 games this season.

“I’ve never had anybody, obviously, like that,” said Charger Coach Mike Lalli,
who all but predicted a breakout season for Pace over the summer.
“Having him creates a lot of confidence. And our challenge is trying to
move the ball outside of Torrian.

“He makes plays on his own and we have to make some plays outside of him … to keep people a little bit honest.”

Added
Pace
, whose only scoreless game this year was in the Chargers’
regular-season loss to the Bulldogs: “I have to give credit to my
O-Line. They’re always fighting, getting their blocks, same with
[fullback] Kevin McGrath.”

The
win was only the second for Chantilly in 10 all-time meetings with
neighboring Westfield (9-3). But both victories have come in the
post-season.

The Chargers beat the then-undefeated Bulldogs,
26-21, in the 2006 Northern Region championship game — also at
Westfield — to propel Chantilly to the state final in its only other
win in the series.

It marked the teams’ first regional title since 1996.
 
“The
two playoff games here have been two of the best games I’ve ever been a
part of,” said fifth-year coach Lalli, whose program has been on a
continued meteoric rise since a winless campaign in his inaugural
season. “They’ve both come down to the last second. Basically, both
times we’ve come down and won in the last second, but they’ve had our
number in the regular-season.”

With the win, Chantilly (9-3)
advances to face No. 2 Oakton (12-0) in the Northern Region
championship at 1 p.m. Saturday at Oakton.

The Chargers lost to
the Cougars, 17-15, on the road on October 3. That narrow, two-point
win was by far the closest the Cougars have come to defeat this season.

“[We]
know that this could be our last game together as seniors,” Pace said.
“After these four years, we have to put it all out. We have to play
like it’s our last game.”

No. 5 Chantilly     7   7  14  7  —  35
No. 4 Westfield  
  7  13  8   0  —  28

1Q – CH – Pace 11 run (Abott kick)
1Q – WF – Anderson 60 run (Lawless kick)
2Q – WF – Winfrey 14 from Fenyak (kick failed)
2Q – WF – Anderson 90 run (Lawless kick)
2Q – CH – Pace 19 run (Abott kick)
3Q – CH – Pace 89 run (Abott kick)
3Q – CH – Pace 67 run (Abott kick)
3Q – WF – McInturff 67 from Fenyak (McInturff from Fenyak)
4Q – CH – Pace 7 run (Abott kick)

Passing
CH – Strittmatter – 6-for-12, 73 yards.  WF – Fenyak – 12-for-21, 230 yards, 2 TD, INT;  Spees – 0-for-1, 0 yards, INT.
Rushing
CH – Pace – 34 car, 356 yards, 5 TD;  McGrath – 6 car, 35 yards.  WF – Anderson – 20 car, 200 yards, 2 TD;  Doty – 1 car, 6 yards.
Receiving
CH – Ryan – 2 rec, 37 yards; Vaughn – 3 rec, 22 yards; Gombos – 1 rec, 11 yards.  WF – Winfrey – 5 rec, 110 yards, TD;  McInturff – 4 rec, 87 yards, TD;  Anderson – 1 rec, 30 yards.
Defense
CH – B. Abatemarco – INT;  Fries – INT;  Jeffrey – sack.  WF – Winfrey – fumble forced, fumble recovery;  Hall – 2 TFL.
Time of Possession
CH – 26:31.  WF – 21:21.

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Playoff Volleyball: Virginia AAA State Semifinals

By Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager/Northern Region

**Click the links to the left, above the video for highlights and a photo gallery from both semifinal games**

Chantilly and Westfield traveled to Virginia Commonwealth University’s Siegel Center Thursday night in Richmond looking to advance to the Virginia AAA state championship game and force the first all-Northern Region state final in Virginia High School League history.

Such an accomplishment would also have insured one of the Northern Region representatives the area’s first-ever state volleyball championship.

But it was the undefeated — and region’s top-seeded — Chargers whose dreams were shattered in a heart-breaking, five-game loss to Albemarle while the second-seeded Bulldogs moved on with a four-game win over Landstown.

Chantilly, which had not trailed by a game all season, quickly dropped the first two Thursday night games before rallying to take the next two and extending the match. The teams took turns leading in the fifth and final game and then stood locked at 13, but it was the Patriots who eventually prevailed, scoring the match’s final two points to secure a 25-22, 25-20, 19-25, 20-25, 15-13 victory.

Chargers’ junior middle hitter Allison Williams had eight blocks and tied junior outside hitter Samantha Reeves with a team-high 13 kills.

After rooting for its crosstown rival but watching them fall, Westfield walked onto the floor for its semifinal match determined not to suffer the same fate.

“We were cheering for them,” said Bulldog senior and Northern Region Player of the Year Sammy Spees. “They are a district team so we wanted them to win. After watching them, we really tried hard to use it as a positive.

“We play for us but we are also a part of a good district with great teams so we are representing them when we play.”

Westfield dropped the first game, but rebounded to sweep the next three and take the match 23-25, 25-21, 26-24, 25-22.

Spees finished with a match-high 17 kills while sophomore Emily Kohler added 14. 

With the win, Westfield became only the second Northern Region team to reach the finals; Langley did so just a year ago.

“All year long this team has worked so hard and never complained,” Westfield Coach Jim Bour said. “They stick together and good things happen to players who care about their teammates. That is what has driven us this far.

“Now we go enjoy this for about 24-hours and then get back to work.”

Westfield will play Albemarle for the state championship at 7 p.m. Saturday night at the Siegel Center.

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Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By: Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager/DigitalSports.com

**Click HERE to see complete highlights from Friday nights playoffs game**

Senior runningback Torrian Pace led Chantilly to a 47-38 win over Annandale with 368-yards rushing and five touchdowns earning him the Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week. He totaled 421-yards of total offense also catching a 53-yard pass from quarterback Roger Strittmatter for a first quarter touchdown.

“This goes to my O-line and everyone that was blocking for me” said Pace before heading out to practice Wednesday. “Without them, I probably woudn’t have gotten this award.”

The Chargers advanced to the semifinals and will face defending AAA state champion Westfield for a berth in the Northern Region championship game.

“We have to believe we can do it” added Pace. “[Westfield] is a very good team, very well rounded. We have to play to the best of our ability and not make any mistakes.”

Click here for a complete list of winners

Cox Communications is proud to serve the residents of Fairfax County, and is honored to present the Cox ON DEMAND High School Performer of the Week trophy award to the standout player from a Fairfax County team weekly.

Please send nominations to awatts@digitalsports.com

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