Chantilly High School | Archive | September, 2009

Football: W.T. Woodson 26, Chantilly 14

By Phil Murphy

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

Please send any video title corrections to pmurphy@digitalsports.com

*Click the Video link on the top-left to view all the highlights from this game.

Box Score             1    2    3    4    —    F  

Chantilly               7    0    0    7    —   14
W.T. Woodson     7    0    0   19   —   26

Scoring Plays                               
1Q — WT — Reilly 1 run (Willard kick) — 8:52

1Q — CH Farris 1 run (Hutzel kick) — 1:51
4Q —
CH Farris 44 run (Hutzel kick) — 9:02

4Q — WT — Ngampa 55 run (Willard kick)8:11

4Q — WT — Johnson 56 run (kick failed)4:56
4Q — WT — Hogan 37 interception return (pass failed)— 4:02

Passing

CH – Romine – 3-for-16, 29 yards, INT. WT – Reilly – 11-for-23, 110 yards.

Rushing

CH – Farris – 16 car, 111 yards, 2 TD; Hill – 10 car, 31 yards; Romine – 8
car, 22 yards. WT – Ngampa – 9 car, 144 yards, TD; Johnson – 15 car, 121 yards, TD; Reilly – 14 car, 82 yards, TD; Fridley – 2 car, 4 yards.

Receiving

CH – Martin – 1
rec, 19 yards; Voorhies – 1 rec, 8 yards; Farris – 1 rec, 5 yards. WT –
Breslin – 3
rec, 67 yards; Collins – 1 rec, 12 yards; Le – 2 rec, 10
yards; Fridley – 2 rec, 8 yards; Dempsey – 1 rec, 6 yards; Johnson – 1 rec, 5 yards; Hogan – 1 rec, 2 yards.

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Football: Chantilly at W.T. Woodson Preview

By Phil Murphy

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

*Click here to see other game previews!!*


Chantilly (2-1) at Woodson (2-1)
Speaking of possible first-round Division 6 playoff meetings, the Chargers travel down Route 50 — past my house — to visit the Cavaliers this week.

Woodson won the last two meetings in this series, 20-7 in 2003 and 42-8 in 2004. Chantilly’s last win came Halloween Night in 1998 as running backs Derek Sampson and Marchello Squirewell each went over 100 yards and scored twice.

Be impressed. It’s what I do.

Though it will always cost the Chargers PowerPoints, their Week 1, last-second loss at South County may prove a blessing in disguise. The focus has been off Chantilly the last two weeks and it has taken advantage with a pair of mechanical wins over Langley and West Potomac.

Woodson, meanwhile, went from cloud nine to whatever the opposite of cloud nine is in the last two weeks — quick search of Google says the origin of that colloquialism is unknown.

It had a thrilling road win over Lake Braddock in Week 2, but was derailed by Lee last week. The passing game which posted a school-record 504 yards against the Bruins was limited to 20-percent of that — not including 62 yards in the final :29 seconds — against the Lancers.

The Cavalier aerial attack needs to double the output from last week — and all signs suggest they will — for their winning streak in the series to be extended to three.

To run the winning streak this season to three, the Chargers would be well-served to take a page out of the ’98 playbook. Spreading the love between easier-to-pronounce tailbacks, plus a 6-for-6 passing night from junior quarterback Carson Romine — a la quarterback Jim Devine 11 years ago — should urge Chantilly to victory.

And for better or worse, it would urge them back into the Northern Region limelight, too.

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Football: Chantilly 35, West Potomac 7

By Phil Murphy

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

Please send any video title corrections to pmurphy@digitalsports.com

*Click the Video link on the top-left to view all the highlights from this game.

Box Score              1    2    3    4   —    F  
West Potomac      0    0    0    7   —    7
Chantilly               14   7    0   14   —   35

Scoring Plays                               
1Q — CH — Farris 23 run (Hutzel kick) — 9:19
1Q — CH — Rudorfer 1 run (Hutzel kick) — 2:53
2Q —
CH — Martin 14 run (Hutzel kick) — 6:27
4Q — CH — Martin 31 punt return (Hutzel kick) — 9:22
4Q — WP — Lee 10 from Dimitrijevic (Dynes kick) — 5:33
4Q — CH — Voorhies 5 run (Hutzel kick) — 2:49

Passing
WP – Dimitrijevic – 10-for-12, 130 yards, TD; Mathewson – 4-for-13, 27 yards. CH – Romine – 2-for-8, 36 yards.

Rushing

WP – Layne – 17 car, 70 yards; E.J. Johnson – 11 car, 50 yards; Mathewson – 7
car, 47 yards; Dimitrijevic – 1 car, 4 yards. CH –
Farris – 20 car, 114 yards, TD; Hicks – 12 car, 58 yards; Rudorfer – 5 car, 23 yards, TD; Martin – 1
car, 14 yards; Romine – 1 car, 11 yards; Yeon – 3 car, 9 yards; Voorhies – 1 car, 1 yards, TD.
Receiving
WP – Copeland – 6 rec, 64 yards; Lawson – 2 rec, 34 yards; Essex
– 4 rec, 29 yards; Lee – 2 rec, 20 yards, TD. CH – Voorhies – 1
rec, 24 yards; Simms – 1 rec, 12 yards.

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Football: Week 3 — Weekend Preview

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

*Games are listed alphabetically. District games are listed first, followed by out-of-district match-ups.

Week 2 Highlights

Click here for LIVE FINAL SCORES!!!

Email pmurphy@digitalsports.com with scores.

NORTHERN REGION WEEK 3:  BY THE NUMBERS
504 – Passing yards for Woodson quarterback Connor Reilly last week, a school record.

4 – First-half interceptions by the Herndon and Langley defenses last week against McLean and Chantilly, respectively.
13 – Receptions last week for Langley senior receiver Artie McGonigal.
489 – Rushing yards through two games for McLean senior Riley Beiro on 71 carries. He has six touchdowns.
32, 76 – Length, in yards, of two interception returns for scores by Lake Braddock senior defensive back Thomas Stickford in first two games.


LIBERTY DISTRICT
Langley (0-2) at Madison (1-1), 7:30 p.m.
The Warhawks have won the last four games in this series and seven of the last eight, but only two wins came by more than 10 points.

Last week, Langley intercepted Chantilly four times in the first half — two by junior cornerback Nick Amano-Dolan — and led, 20-14, after two quarters. But the Chargers outscored the Saxons 28-0 after half time to drop the hosts to 0-2. Saxon senior wide receiver Artie McGonigal exploited the Charger Cover 2 for 13 catches — the best single-game total in the region this year — and 127 yards.

Madison, meanwhile, rebounded from a season-opening Outback Bowl loss to defending Division 6 champion Oakton with a dominant, 21-3 win over Yorktown. The Warhawks grabbed the lead early and choked the game away with their patented power running game. Senior running back Tavin Thomas carried 21 times for a game-high 123 yards and two touchdowns, with 85 yards coming after half time.

Last year, the Saxons led the Warhawks, 14-3, early in the third quarter, but Madison quarterback Will Clarkson went 9-for-9 passing in the second half en route to a come-from-behind, 18-14 road victory.

For Langley to avoid an 0-3 start, it needs to force notoriously responsible Madison into turnovers, as it did to Chantilly in the first half last week. The keys to the Warhawks earning their fifth-straight win in the series are getting an early lead — thus enabling the run-happy offense to milk the clock late — and keeping speedy Saxon sophomore Marcus Harvey inside the tackles.

NATIONAL DISTRICT
Mount Vernon (0-2) at Edison (1-1), 7:30 p.m.
Since Mount Vernon beat Edison, 22-21, in Week 10 of the 1999 season to eliminate it from playoff contention, the Eagles have won eight of the last nine games. The average margin of victory is over 14 points per game.

Last week, Edison rebounded from a season-opening loss with a thrilling, 31-30 win over Centreville on a 28-yard field goal by senior Bill Arnez with :05 seconds left.

Senior athlete Chris Washington did it all in the win. He caught a 40-yard pass from senior Levi Barber on 4th-and-19 to keep the game-winning drive alive in the final minute, took an interception 31 yards to pay dirt and somersaulted for a sideline fumble recovery that was incorrectly disallowed.

Mount Vernon suffered its second-straight lopsided loss, falling at home, 33-0, to T.C. Williams. The Majors had to replace their entire offensive line in the offseason and are still feeling the growing pains. They are the only team in the Northern Region — and one of two AAA teams in the state (Princess Anne) — still without a touchdown.

Last year, Edison feel behind early on a 90-yard kickoff return touchdown by then-junior Dannish Decardi-Nelson. The Eagles, though, scored the next 47 points en route to a 47-21 road win.

But, of the 47 points scored, only six are still on the roster. Senior running back TreVaughn Lincoln scored the final Edison touchdown early in the fourth quarter.

Washington-Lee (0-2) at Hayfield (1-1), 7:30 p.m.

This is the first meeting between the Generals and Hawks in over a decade, but these two teams have one thing in common: This season is nothing like last year.

Washington-Lee fell to McLean and South County in succession at home, accounting for just 60 yards on 41 offensive plays in the latter. Despite not allowing the Stallions to run an offensive play in the third quarter, the Generals failed to prevent the shutout.

Hayfield, for its part, appears as one of the early-season dark horses to challenge Edison for the National District championship. The Hawks — winners of just two total games in the previous three seasons — have scored 70 points in two games this year. That outburst is the highest production in back-to-back games since Weeks 7 and 8 of 2004.

Via its triple-option attack, Hayfield carried 25 times for 318 yards and four touchdowns in its season-opening, 35-0 win over Marshall. Last week, the Hawks took to the air, as senior quarterback Anton McCallum completed 17 of his 32 passes for 230 yards with four touchdowns and one interception.

That came in against one of the area’s best secondaries at Lee.

For Washington-Lee to slow Hayfield, it must keep an eye on senior running back Rayshawn Rigans, who is averaging 17.1 yards per reception and 12.4 yards per rush this season.

But that doesn’t mean eyes off McCallum. He posted a 71-yard rushing touchdown last week, showcasing every millisecond of his 4.46 40-yard speed.

PATRIOT DISTRICT
Annandale (2-0) at South County (2-0), 7:30 p.m.
In four all-time match-ups, the Atoms and Stallions have each won twice. But only once was a game decided by less than 16 points.

This season, both squads are off to impressive starts and show every indication that this season’s meeting will break the historic trend of one-sided results.

Annandale beat upstart Centreville at home before traveling to beat Falls Church, 42-12, last week. Utilizing a two-quarterback system, the Atom offense spread the ball around against the Jaguars, having four different players score their first four touchdowns.

South County opened with a sensational win over Chantilly before shutting out Washington-Lee, 35-0, last week. The Stallions yielded one first-half first down — on a pass interference call — and gave up 60 total offensive yards on 41 plays from scrimmage.

The secondary held the Generals to 3-for-14 passing for 11 yards and two interceptions. Senior defensive back Gabe Jackson took an interception 85 yards for a score to seal the win.

The most intriguing individual match-up is between Annandale junior receiver Melvin Robinson — the No. 2-ranked recruit in Virginia from the class of 2011 — and South County senior safety Andre Simmons, who holds over a half-dozen Division I scholarship offers. That makes the production of Atom senior receiver Rob Potts that much more pivotal Thursday. Stallion senior defensive lineman Anthony Carabali will wreak havoc in the backfield, so the short passing game — a la Potts — will be key.

W.T. Woodson (2-0) at Robert E. Lee (2-0), 7:30 p.m.

DigitalSports Game of the Week
Woodson and Lee played annually until 2004 — with the Lancers taking four of the last five — but neither Trey Taylor or Rob Everett were coaching their respective teams back then.

Both teams enter riding strong waves of momentum.

Woodson beat Lake Braddock, 43-42, on an amazing two-point conversion toss from senior quarterback Connor Reilly to senior tight end James Hogan with 1:06 left in the fourth quarter. That only came after senior running back James Johnson took a screen pass 89 yards for the score that set up the winning point-after.

Oh, by the way, Reilly threw for a school record 504 yards on 34-for-53 passing in the win.

Lee, meanwhile, beat Hayfield, 40-35, in a track meet last Friday. Lancer senior running back Idreis Augustus carried 13 times for 281 yards and three touchdowns, bringing his total to seven scores in two games this season. Senior quarterback Greg Lopez went 4-for-7 passing with 97 yards and touchdown and senior running back Jazmier Williams carried 15 times for 71 yards and a score.

Lee struggled against the Hayfield passing attack, though, allowing 220 yards and four touchdown passes, while intercepting one.

The key to victory for the Cavaliers is keeping Augustus in check — good luck — and using Johnson out of the backfield in the passing game, something the Hawks found success with via Rayshawn Rigans.

The Lancers need Augustus’ former Paul VI running mate, senior linebacker Eric Wright, to raise heck like he did last week against the running game, allowing 55 yards on 25 rushes sans a 71-yard score by Anton McCallum.

Also, the secondary needs to force turnovers, unlike last week. If Reilly’s passing yards approach my SAT Reading score again, Woodson is walking out with a win.

This one is guaranteed to be more competitive than the offseason pick-up basketball games between Taylor and Everett at Lifetime Fitness in Fairfax — maybe.

OUT-OF-DISTRICT
Herndon (2-0) at South Lakes (2-0), 7:30 p.m.

The Hornets have won six straight games in this series and eight of the last nine, average score: 30-9.

Through two weeks, Herndon is still unbeaten, but not unblemished. It
lost four fumbles against McLean last week and struggled to slow
Highlander running back Riley Beiro,
who carried 44 times for 199 yards and three scores. The Hornets
survived, 28-21, but needed a late-game, 10-yard touchdown run by
senior quarterback Zack Ozycz to do so.

McLean led, 14-7, at the half.

South Lakes won a pair of lopsided game, beating Falls Church and Jefferson, 41-14 and 41-0, respectively. Junior running back Ja’Juan Jones has 23 rushes this season for 286 yards and five touchdowns. Running mate — and fellow junior — Darius Smith added 13 carries for 136 yards and two scores in those two wins.

Defensively, senior defensive lineman Matt Most had three sacks and two tackles for loss last week alone.

The Hornets promise to be the biggest test for the Seahawks, by a comfortable margin. Senior wide receiver Nick Impellizzeri
had eight receptions for 112 yards and a score last week, with seven
catches coming in the second half. The secondary, led by senior Devon Thompson, also a standout running back, is the best the Seahawks have seen by far.

The last time South Lakes started a season 2-0 was in 2002, when it
went 9-4 and won the Division 5 Northern Region title. But, after the
2-0 start, it was shut out, 30-0, by Robinson in Week 3. The Rams
finished as the Division 6 runner-up that year.

Jefferson (0-2) at Falls Church (0-2), 7:30 p.m.

Last season, the Colonials regained control of this series with a dramatic overtime win. The Jaguars scored the would-be game-tying touchdown in overtime and elected to go for two — and the win. Jefferson defensive back Adil Dittmer batted down the ensuing pass, lifting the Colonials to a 28-27 win.

Aside from a Falls Church win in 2007, Jefferson has won every meeting in this series since 2001.

Both teams are searching for something upon which to build momentum after a pair of tough losses.

Jefferson fell to Herndon and South Lakes by a combined 102-6. Falls Church lost to South Lakes and Annandale by a collective 83-26.

The key match-up is between the two quarterbacks: Colonial sophomore Kevin Karn and Jaguar senior Ajay Kashyap. Their season numbers to date have been strikingly similar — and impressive, despite their teams’ less-than-favorable results.

Karn is 24-for-41 passing with 292 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions through two games. Kashyap, meanwhile, is 24-for-51 for 305 yards, two touchdowns and one pick.

McLean (1-1) at Wakefield (0-2), 7:30 p.m.

The Highlanders and Warriors played a back-to-back-to-back, Tom-Emanski series
from 2002-04 with McLean winning twice. Its wins came by lopsided
margins — 38-7 and 63-0. Wakefield’s win was 17-14 in 2003.

Employing a more-simplified offense, the Highlanders have opened eyes
region-wide through two weeks.

They smacked Washington-Lee, 44-14, in
Week 1 before playing highly-touted Herndon close for 48 minutes last
week and led the game for over a quarter-and-a-half. In two games.
McLean senior running back Riley Beiro has carried 71 times for 489 yards and six scores.

But ESPN’s John Clayton is reporting that he is unavailable for tonight’s game, so adjust your fantasy lineups accordingly.

Wakefield opened the season with a pair of home losses — 38-6 to Lee
and 28-24 to Dominion. The Warriors are still seeking a replacement for
graduated all-district running back Romeo Goffney, who was used much like the Highlanders have deployed Beiro this season.

The obvious key to a Wakefield win is slowing McLean’s backfield replacement, junior James Ludwick — while not losing sight of Highlander senior tight end Jonathan Fremermann,
who has six receptions for 120 yards and two touchdowns in two games, and will be relied on in Beiro’s absence.
It also needs to take care of the ball — McLean forced four fumbles
last week and recovered them all.

The Highlanders are forced to look outside of Beiro for scoring
options Thursday. He missed five games last season due to
injury, so they are familiar to that necessity. Still, he accounted for over two-thirds of the offense touches last week. He will be desperately needed once district play begins next
week against Madison.

Oakton (2-0) at T.C. Williams (1-1), 4:45 p.m.

Last year, the Titans appeared ready to shock the world, leading the
Cougars 10-0 at half time. But, as was commonplace for T.C. Williams in
2008, Oakton scored 39 points in a 13-minute, 39-second second-half
stretch en route to a 39-23, deceptively dominant win.

Almost none of the skill position players from that game remain, and apparently neither does the Titans’ propensity to fold.

Last week, it dominated Mount Vernon for 48 minutes en route to a 33-0 road win.

Oakton, meanwhile, won an overtime thriller over West Springfield,
35-34, in a rematch of last season’s Division 6 semifinal. The game was
decided on a blocked extra point by second-team all-state defensive
back Andrew Leonard, who also had an interception in the win.

In this series, the Cougars have beaten the Titans each of the last four years, never by less than 12 points.

But T.C. Williams has not had this athletic of a backfield in years, with running backs Cortez Taylor and Robert Carter, who were featured at quarterback, as well, last week.

That’s the lone change in the Titans’ favor.

While quarterback Chris Coyer graduated, junior signal-caller Jimmy Boone
stepped in and has not missed a beat. His average game this season is
9-for-17 passing with 124 yards with a touchdown, plus 13 carries for
83 yards and a rushing touchdown.

He has not thrown an interception this season and beat two playoff teams from last year.

Robinson (2-0) at Marshall (0-2), 7:30 p.m.

These teams have not met this decade.

Marshall was deflated last week at the injury of senior Jake Bennett,
a do-everything starter that suffered a painful lower-back strain in
the first half against Stuart. It never recovered mentally and lost,
34-14.

Robinson used 64-yard touchdown run by senior Jared Velasquez
to close the half, taking the lead for good in a 27-7 win over Fairfax.
Four different Rams scored touchdowns in the win, including junior Matt Zanellato, who returned a blocked punt 18 yards to the house.

To derail the Rams attack, the Statesmen need to force turnovers and have senior quarterback Justin Stalcup utilize every offensive asset to create first downs.

Expect a heavy dose of Velasquez, as well as senior bulldozer Connor Riley, with a touch of junior running back K.B. Musokotwane to spell the starters.

Robinson has not started 3-0 since 2004.

Stone Bridge (2-0) at West Springfield (1-1), 7:30 p.m.

In four all-time meetings, West Springfield has never beaten Stone
Bridge. The Spartans allow 38.3 points per game in the series — but
score 24.8 points per game to be fair. So, historically, expect
big-time numbers.

Since the changing of the guard at West Springfield, the Spartans have
shown promise. They beat Edison in the opener and fell last week to
Oakton, 35-34, in overtime on a blocked extra point. The
dual-quarterback system is still functioning, as senior Eric Schauder and junior Matt Prokop each led two touchdown drives in regulation last week.

Prokop, whose numbers were much beefier than Schauder, got the nod in the overtime and found senior receiver T.J. O’Connell (nine catches, 164 yards) for a touchdown on that bonus drive.

Stone Bridge beat Westfield, 21-18, in a high-profile opener, but
struggled against former Dulles District foe Heritage last week. The
Bulldogs trailed 8-0 at half time and 8-6 through three quarters before
taking control of the game late. Senior running back Marcus Harris carried 25 times for 125 yards and three one-yard touchdown runs.

Last season, Stone Bridge erupted for 42 first-half points at home
against West Springfield and led, 42-7, through three quarters. The
Spartans scored a trio of touchdowns late to close the gap to 42-28.

But, of the 42 points scored in the win, only six remain on the roster. Senior kicker Abdul Shaban was 6-for-6 on extra points in last year’s season-opener.

Stuart (1-1) at Fairfax (0-2), 7:30 p.m.
The Rebels and Raiders lack any recent history against one another, but both are coming off games they can build on.

Stuart snapped a region-long 10-game losing streak in emphatic fashion, beating Marshall, 34-14. It put the game to bed with a pair of defensive touchdowns in the fourth quarter. Both senior running back Chris Ventura and junior quarterback Jason Friday each cracked 100 yards rushing.

Fairfax had a would-be game-tying fourth-quarter touchdown against Robinson called back by a block-in-the-back penalty. Two plays later, the Rebels lost a fumble at the Rams’ 13-yard line. Robinson drove the length of the field, scoring twice in the final 3:35 of regulation to provide a 27-7 final.

For Fairfax to secure its first win before rejoining the Liberty District next week, it has to continue to ride its trio of running backs, who have accounted for all three of its touchdowns this season. They are senior Ife Oladapo and juniors Marcus Bailey and Anton Burns. The Rebels, though, need more offensive balance. They’ve only completed four passes this season, one longer than six yards.

Stuart needs to improve on its 2-for-19 passing performance against Marshall. Fairfax possesses too many talented tacklers in its front seven to be beaten by a run-only attack.

West Potomac (1-1) at Chantilly (1-1), 7:30 p.m.
The schedule makers did neither West Potomac nor Chantilly any favors with their respective early-season gauntlets.

Now, the Wolverines have to defeat the defending regional finalists to remain above .500, while the Chargers — who yielded 13 receptions to Langley’s No. 2 receiver — need to stop one of the most diverse aerial attacks to do the same.

West Potomac pounced on Mount Vernon for a decisive Week 1 win, but committed four first-half turnovers and had a punt blocked and recovered in its end zone in a loss last week at Westfield. The Bulldogs gave the Wolverines opportunities to pass the ball underneath, but made a determined — and admitted — effort to stop the deep ball.

Chantilly has experienced the reverse. After a heart-breaking loss to South County in the season-opener, it came from behind last week to beat Langley on the road.

The Chargers threw four first-half interceptions, but only trailed, 20-14, at the half thanks to a fumble return for a score by senior linebacker Danny Lauro. Senior Mike Farris scored three of his four touchdowns after the break as Chantilly was Paced to 28 unanswered second-half points and a 42-20 win.

The Chargers, though, allowed 18-for-30 passing for 230 yards and a score.

To have success against the stronger Wolverine passing game, led by senior Colin Mathewson, the Chargers need to take page out of the Bulldogs’ playbook and be opportunistic — as Westfield was — when the ball hits the deck.

West Potomac will find added success if it can minimize the mental errors that plagued it last week. And the Wolverines will find the bus ride to Alexandria more bearable if it can force early turnovers and keep the Charger defense off-balance by spreading the ball between senior receivers Deandre Essex and Shawn Lee, as well as senior running back Darel Layne.
 
Westfield (1-1) at Lake Braddock (1-1), 7:30 p.m.

Some experts — cough — pegged this a potential Northern Region
championship preview. Thanks to some tough early-season scheduling,
though, Lake Braddock and Westfield need to win this game to avoid
slipping below .500.

Westfield fell by three at Stone Bridge in Week 1, before rebounding
nicely last week, 35-14, against West Potomac. The Bulldogs held the
Wolverines’ aerial attack to 6.0 yards per attempt and churned up a
nice ground game for their own part, averaging 5.7 yards per carry as a
team.

Senior two-way starter Dylan Doty ran for a touchdown, knocked down two fourth-down passes in the red zone and blocked a punt that senior Vinny Caporossi dove on for a game-changing score.

Lake Braddock, meanwhile, was upset at home by Woodson, 43-42, on a
hair-raising two-point conversation in the final minute. Without
offensive guru Bill Renner on the sideline, the Bruin offense came and went in waves, at one point allowing the Cavaliers to post 28 unanswered points.

Still, junior quarterback Michael Nebrich
rushed for 156 yards on 18 carries, including a spectacular 19-yard
touchdown run, and went 18-for-33 passing for 246 yards, three scores
and two picks. Seven of those completions and 131 yards were to senior
receiver Ali Banihashemi, who had two of the touchdown tosses to his name.

The Bruin secondary, though, allowed the Cavaliers to break a school
record for passing yardage, which was surpassed on an 89-yard
screen-turned-touchdown with 1:06 to go.

These teams have not met since Evan Royster‘s junior season at Westfield, 2004, but the Bulldogs have never lost in the series.

Variables abound in this game, but it promises to be one of the best of the young season.

Yorktown (1-1) at Centreville (0-2), 7:30 p.m.
With Stuart’s win last week, Centreville now has the longest current losing streak in the Northern Region at 10 games. Only one other team has lost more than three in a row — Washington-Lee (five).

That statistic alone does not do the Wildcats justice. They were five seconds from a win at Edison last week and lost to Annandale on the road on a touchdown with 1:38 remaining in Week 1.

Yorktown’s spread worked to perfection in its season-opening win over Wilson (D.C.), but it had no answer for Madison’s running game last week in a 21-3 road loss. While the Patriots had possession, senior receiver Mike Veith proved a trusty target (five receptions, 49 yards), but the Warhawks milked away the final two quarters with their downhill running game.

For Centreville to snap its skid, senior quarterback Cam Walter could use another passing performance like he had last week — 11-for-20, 199 yards, two touchdowns, no interceptions — and the Wildcats would be well-served to keep their offensive diversity. Four different receivers caught more than three passes.

The special teams were also exquisite. Sophomore Connor Coward was 3-for-3 on field goals, two over 30 yards, and Centreville was flawless on extra points.

Yorktown needs to take advantage of early possessions for points, because physically larger opponents do not bode well for teams trying to stop late-game running plays.

The Patriots also need to find a play maker. In their first two games, they have had two total plays of over 20 yards — one a 35-yard recovered fumble advancement.

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Football: Chantilly 42, Langley 20

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

Please send any video title corrections to pmurphy@digitalsports.com

*Click the Video link on the top-left to view all the highlights from this game.

Box Score          1    2    3    4     —    F  
Chantilly          14   0   14  14    —   42
Langley             0   20   0    0     —   20

Scoring Plays                               
1Q — CH — Farris 4 run (Hutzel kick) — 6:32
1Q — CH — Lauro 6 fumble return (Hutzel kick) — 6:21
2Q — LGHarvey 2 run (kick blocked) — 5:47
2Q — LGPritchett 1 run (Kiffe from Anderson) — 2:41
2Q — LGKiffe 22 from Anderson (run failed) — 0:24
3Q — CH — Farris 3 run (Hutzel kick) — 6:37
3Q — CH — Farris 1 run (Hutzel kick) — 4:30
4Q CH — Hicks 16 run (Hutzel kick) — 4:57
4Q CH — Farris 11 run (Hutzel kick) — 1:02


Passing
CH – Romine – 5-for-13, 92 yards, 4 INT. LG – Anderson – 18-for-30, 230 yards, TD; Amano-Dolan – 0-for-1, 0 yards.
Rushing
CH – Farris – 18 car, 78 yards, 4 TD; Rudorfer – 10 car, 33 yards; Hicks – 5 car, 22 yards; Hill – 3 car, 17 yards; Romine – 6 car, 7 yards; Bracco – 1 car, 2 yards; Martin – 1 car, 2
yards. LG – Harvey – 22 car, 42 yards, TD; Pritchett – 1 car, 1 yard, TD; Pratt – 1 car, 0 yards; Anderson – 1 car, -7 yards; Amano-Dolan – 1 car, -8 yards.
Receiving
CH – Simms – 3 rec, 58 yards; Voorhies – 1 rec, 5 yards; Farris
– 1 rec, 13 yards. LG – McGonigal – 13 rec, 127 yards; Kiffe – 4 rec, 71 yards, TD; Searight – 1
rec, 32 yards.

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Football: Week 2 — Weekend Preview

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

*Games are listed alphabetically. District games are listed first, followed by out-of-district match-ups.

Week 1 Highlights

Click here for LIVE SCORES as they come in

Email pmurphy@digitalsports.com with scores.

Postponements:
Annandale at Falls Church, Saturday 6 p.m.
Centreville at Edison, Saturday 7 p.m.

NORTHERN REGION WEEK 1:  BY THE NUMBERS
166 – The total
fourth-quarter passing yards last week by Falls Church senior quarterback Ajay Kashyap on 7-for-10 passing, including two touchdowns.
-3 – The total yards allowed by the West Potomac defense on 18 second-half plays last week. They yielded 40 total yards for the game.
1.7 – The average point differential between South Lakes and Jefferson in their last five meetings. The difference favors the Seahawks, though the Colonials have won three of those games.
80, 78, 68 – The distances of three touchdowns Hayfield scored last week against Marshall. It faces Lee, which has four first-time defensive line starters, this week.
0 – The number of completed passes Woodson allowed last week against Fairfax. It faces Lake Braddock this week; that number may rise.


LIBERTY DISTRICT
South Lakes (1-0) at Jefferson (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
South Lakes has not had more than three wins since 2005 (5-5), but looks well on its way after the season-opening 41-14 home win over Falls Church.

Seahawks’ Coach John Ellenberger was beaming in the preseason over his junior running backs and senior quarterback, none of whom disappointed. Ja’Juan Jones carried 16 times for 135 yards and three scores and Darius Smith rushed 9 times for 71 yards and touchdown, adding a 48-yard reception.

Signal-caller Shawn Rana was remarkably efficient — 8-for-12, 136 yards, TD, INT — with the only interception coming via an athletic play by a Jaguar cornerback on a well-thrown ball. Junior wide receiver Sean Price — younger brother of A.J. Price (Penn State) — was a reliable target, catching four passes for 74 yards and a fourth-quarter touchdown.

More impressive in a more one-sided game was Jefferson sophomore quarterback Kevin Karn. Karn, against a physically superior Herndon defense, went 14-for-23 passing for 208 yards, with a touchdown and no picks. He completed three-or-more passes to three different receivers, all of whom recorded 50-plus yards. The Colonials, though, lost two fumbles on their first three plays, which led to 14 Hornet points en route to 61-6 home loss. The defense also allowed Herndon’s top two running backs 228 yards and four touchdowns on only nine carries.

This series has been extremely close this decade, with Jefferson winning three of the five match-ups. The average score, though, favors South Lakes, 28.8-27.1.

To prevent the Seahawks from evening the series, the Colonials’ defense must perform better stopping the run and be more responsible with the football offensively. South Lakes’ pass defense allowed Falls Church to go 7-for-10 passing with 166 yards and two touchdowns in the fourth quarter and will need to step up its game to stop a very similar — but less-experienced — pass attack, led by Karn.

PATRIOT DISTRICT
W.T. Woodson (1-0) at Lake Braddock (1-0), 7:30 p.m.
While this is its first year in the district — and will be its first Patriot game — Woodson has some familiarity with Lake Braddock. The Cavaliers and Bruins have met five times since 1999, with Lake Braddock winning all five games by a combined 118-69.

That includes a thrilling 23-22 Bruin win in Week 2 last year, in which Cavalier senior quarterback Connor Reilly had his Hail Mary pass batted down at the 3-yard line as time expired. He finished 16-for-25 passing with 244 yards with a touchdown and an interception. In that game, senior running back James Johnson — who started at linebacker and did not have a carry last week against Fairfax — had 11 rushes for 110 yards and a score.

The Bruins return many of their contributors, too. Junior quarterback Michael Nebrich went 7-for-10 passing for 136 yards, adding 22 rush attempts for 86 yards and two scores. Senior tight end Mike Resetar had four receptions for 101 yards.

Last week, against Langley, Lake Braddock unveiled its new “Renner”-vated offense and cruised to a 38-0 win. Nebrich threw for 294 yards and two touchdowns on 18-for-32 passing — which includes several early dropped balls. He completed 12 of 16 passes after halftime.

But it was the Bruin defense that impressed most, holding the run-happy Saxons to 71 yards on 35 carries. Senior defensive back Thomas Stickford had three interceptions, including a 32-yard return for a score.

Meanwhile, against Fairfax, Woodson scored the go-ahead touchdown with :21 seconds left in the first half on a diving catch in the end zone by junior running back Paul Fridley from Reilly. Reilly, committed to Temple, completed 16 of his 29 passes for 183 yards for two touchdowns and an interception. He connected with seven different receivers, six of whom had multiple receptions.

Expect both teams to spread the ball around noticeably offensively. Lake Braddock is in its second week of the new offense, which should continue the in-game improvement it hadat Langley in Week 1. But this is the first week it will be employed without Bill Renner on the sidelines, so the Bruin offensive coaches are on their own.

Woodson’s defense must get off to a better start than it did against Fairfax last week, as it allowed two scores of longer than 40 yards in the first 12:10 of the game. But the Cavaliers held the Rebels to two non-penalty first downs after halftime and without a completion for the entire game. It will take a similar effort — and similar turnover capitalization — for four quarters to keep oversized Lake Braddock within reach.

OUT-OF-DISTRICT
Annandale (1-0) at Falls Church (0-1), Saturday 6 p.m.
This is the first meeting between the Atoms and the Jaguars in over 10 seasons.

Annandale secured a hard-fought home win over Centreville, 21-14, to open the season. The defense allowed just one touchdown to the young, athletic Wildcats and the offense used a balanced, conservative approach to secure the win. First-year quarterback, junior Tony Hysjulien threw for 200 yards on 9-for-16 passing with a touchdown and two picks while sharing time with senior Rick Adams, who had 88 yards on 3-for-6 passing. Adams also had the game-winning, one-yard touchdown run with 2:38 left in regulation.

With all Centreville eyes on standout Annandale junior Melvin Robinson at receiver — whose three receptions for 60 yards were all after half time — senior wide-out Rob Potts caught four balls for a game-high 85 yards, including a spectacular 35-yard reception that set up the winning score.

Falls Church, meanwhile, struggled for three quarters at South Lakes last week before showing signs of life in the fourth period. Jaguar senior quarterback Ajay Kashyap was 7-for-10 passing for 166 yards and two touchdowns in the fourth quarter, including an incredible 65-yard catch-and-run by senior Amilicar Ferrufino.

To contend with Annandale, Falls Church needs to employ the opportunistic passing game it showcased in the final frame of its Week 1 loss and find ways to get to the Atoms to cough up possessions. Also, the Jaguars need to steal a play out of the Wildcats’ defensive playbook and keep Robinson quiet as long as possible, praying Potts does not have another big game against single coverage.

Centreville (0-1) at Edison (0-1), Saturday, 7 p.m.
Since 1997, the Eagles and Wildcats have met just twice, Centreville winning both ends of a home-and-home series in 2003 and 2004 by a collective 70-18.

The Wildcats suffered a disappointing, seven-point road loss last week, but showed amazing promise. Sophomore tailback Manny Smith had a team-high 12 carries for 98 yards, nine and 89 coming before the half. Senior wide receiver Warren Denny dominated on both sides of the ball, recording six receptions on offense and six tackles and an interception defensively.

Senior quarterback Cam Walter made an early return to the lineup after surgery to repair a torn labrum. He had 11 carries for 46 yards, as well as 8 completions on 18 attempts for 93 yards, a 23-yard touchdown pass to sophomore Chase Walter and an interception.

The Eagles’ road loss, while also disappointing, was harder to swallow. Senior quarterback Levi Barber and senior athlete Christian Washington each showcased their home run potential, scoring touchdowns of 75 and 70 yards, respectively, in the first 13 minutes. But West Springfield front seven disabled the Edison offense thereafter, swallowing Barber for six sacks.

The Eagle defense yielded two second-half scoring drives of 13 plays or more and had no answer for the mobile quarterbacks the Spartans deployed.

If Centreville can repeat its Week 1 performance at Annandale, its athleticism will prove troubling for Edison. The Eagles need to counter that by tackling better and stringing together first downs. If the Wildcats can get to Barber and neutralize senior running back Angus Harper — as the Spartans did, holding him to 15 rushes for 33 yards — they may pull an upset in Alexandria Friday.

Chantilly (0-1) at Langley (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
Chantilly suffered utter heartbreak last week, falling on a 24-yard, 4th-and-10 touchdown pass with :08 seconds left, 23-21, at South County last week. Langley’s season-opener was no less depressing, but not as dramatic, as it was shut out at home, 38-0, by Lake Braddock.

For the Chargers, senior receivers Kris Martin and Braden Voorhees both proved reliable targets for junior quarterback Carson Romine and senior running back Mike Ferris proved life is not totally lost after Pace, carrying 13 times for 60 yards. The defense did not yield a sustained drive until the Stallions’ last-minute march. South County’s first two touchdowns were scored on a one-play, 51-yard first-quarter pass and a five-play, third-quarter strike dominated by a 64-yard fake-punt run.

The Saxons, meanwhile, were plagued by turnovers, poor field position and inability to string together first downs. The Bruins intercepted three passes and held the hosts to 71 rushing yards on 35 carries. Langley had 138 yards and 10 first downs, but no more than two on any drive.

Neither team can afford a loss in ultra-competitive Division 6, especially considering the teams’ Week 3 opponents. Chantilly travels hosts West Potomac, one of the early-season dark horses to contend for the Patriot District title, and Langley travels to Madison, a perennial Division 5 semifinalist.

The Chargers beat the Saxons each of the last two seasons, including a 21-14, Monday-afternoon home win last year.

Dominion (0-2) at Wakefield (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
After its loss to Lee last week, Wakefield welcomes AA opponent Dominion to Arlington.

The Titans have lost 17 of their last 18 games and are 2-4 all-time against current Northern Region opponents, including 1-1 against the Warriors. Dominion has lost its first two games this season by a combined 87-9.

Wakefield is no less desperate for a win. It has statistically the easiest schedule in the region this season, but that will cost it PowerPoints come season’s end. In the Warriors loss to the Lancers last week, junior quarterback Vincent Roberts led a fourth-quarter scoring drive, which he capped with a one-yard dive. But the defense was beat deep for a pair of touchdown tosses to Lee senior running back Idreis Augustus and allowed him another pair of scores on the ground.

If Wakefield wants to make the playoffs for the second time in school history (1986), this game is a must-win.

Fairfax (0-1) at Robinson (1-0), 7:30 p.m.
This has been one of the most one-sided rivalries of the decade, with the Rams winning all five intra-Fairfax meetings by an average score of 42-5.

Last week, both teams faced tales of two halves.

Robinson trailed T.C. Williams 23-14 at half time Thursday before owning possession in the second half en route to a 36-23 win. The Rams ran 38 second-half plays, while the Titans had just 15. Robinson junior running back Jared Velasquez alone had more rushing attempts after the intermission than T.C. ran plays. He finished with 32 carries for 138 yards and four touchdowns as Robinson scored the final 22 points to escape the upset bid.

Fairfax, meanwhile, used a 40-yard touchdown run by junior running back Marcus Bailey and a 65-yard score by junior Anton Burns — all in the first 12:10 of the game — to jump to a 14-7 lead. But Woodson scored twice in the second quarter, including a momentum-grabbing 20-yard score with :21 left in the half, en route 26 unanswered points.

The Rams must quell the Rebels’ home run threats in Bailey and Burns, something they failed to do early against Titan senior Cortez Taylor, who had 183 all-purpose yards and two touchdowns on his first three touches. Robinson made an adjustment and held Taylor to eight carries for negative-three yards after his early surge.

For Fairfax to have a shot at the upset, it must turn defensive errors into long-distance scores and find a way to curtail Robinson’s power running game, which wore out T.C. Williams and chewed clock in the second half. The Rebels also need some aerial versatility on offense; they were held without a completion last week.

Hayfield (1-0) at Robert E. Lee (1-0), 7:30 p.m.
No team made more of a surprising statement last week like Hayfield. With a handful of third-year starters, it employed the triple option to perfection in a decisive, 35-0 home win over Marshall.

Hawk senior quarterback Anton McCallum scored a 34-yard touchdown run on their second offensive play. His co-stars were sophomore running back Steven Lynch, who had an 80-yard touchdown run, and senior tailback Rayshawn Rigans, who scored on an unbelievable 68-yard punt return and a 78-yard touchdown run. They also showcased a variety of screen passes out of the option, which allowed Rigans to tally 40 receiving yards on two catches.

That offensive athleticism, though, is equaled by the Lancers. Senior transfer Idreis Augustus lived up to the hype with four total touchdowns Friday — two rushing, two receiving — and senior returning starter Jazmier Williams complimented Augustus with a 16-yard first-quarter touchdown run. Senior quarterback Greg Lopez was nearly flawless under center against a rebuilding Wakefield team, as Lee posted 38 points in the first half.

The X-factor in Week 2 will be how the Lancers defend the triple option, specifically McCallum, who runs a verified 4.46 40-yard dash. While Lee has four experienced players in its secondary and a beast middle linebacker in senior Eric Wright, it has four first-year starters, all juniors, on its defensive line.

The Lancer offense, led again by its talented backfield trio, should shine again. But if the Hawks find a way to exploit the inexperience of the defensive front four, this may turn into a shootout.

Lee has four-game winning streak in the series, including a 24-7 win last year.

Marshall (0-1) at Stuart (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
Both the Statesmen and Raiders are searching for their first points of 2009.

Stuart fell, 10-0, to city rival, Single-A George Mason. Marshall, meanwhile, fell victim to a well-executed triple option, 35-0, at Hayfield, yielding three touchdowns of 68 yards or more.

In this series, the Statesmen have won the last five games by a combined 161-6, including a 28-0 victory in Week 5 last year.

Keep an eye on Marshall’s running back duo of Victor Vanegas and Aaron Phares, who combined for 93 yards on 35 attempts last week.

McLean (1-0) at Herndon (1-0), 7:30 p.m.
Last week, Herndon erupted for 47 first-half points and played punishing defense en route to a 61-6 road win over Jefferson.

Senior running back Randoll Anane carried five times for 158 yards and two touchdowns, senior running back Devon Thompson rushed four times for 70 yards and two scores and senior quarterback Zack Ozycz went 5-for-7 through the air with 62 yards and a touchdown pass to senior B.F.F. Nick Impellizzeri. Ozycz also added a 63-yard touchdown run that will be on almost every highlight compilation we produce this season.

McLean, meanwhile, earned Coach Jim Patrick an overdue first-career win, 44-14, at Washington-Lee, snapping a region-long 12-game losing streak in the process. Senior tailback Riley Beiro carried 27 times for 290 yards and three touchdowns, adding a handful of 20-plus-yard kickoff and punt returns. Senior tight end Jonathan Fremerman also found space and caught two touchdown passes.

In fact, if the playoffs started today, the Highlanders would be the No. 3 seed in Division 5. For what its worth, the Hornets would be No. 6 in Division 6.

These teams have no recent history, but Herndon enters as the favorite. For McLean to contend, Beiro will need a repeat performance and the defense will have to force turnovers. The Hornets’ skill position players are among the most experienced the Highlanders will face, but the offensive and defensive lines are full of first-year varsity members.

McLean has to exploit that inexperience or the Herndon could put on another offensive clinic.

South County (1-0) at Washington-Lee (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
The Generals are one of four teams that the Stallions will see for the first time in their brief history this year.

Last week, South County nearly watched victory slip through its fingers — then bounce off its chest — but rode senior quarterback Aaron Andrews 69 yards in 66 seconds with no timeouts for the game-winning score on 4th-and-10 with :08 left. Sophomore defensive back Andrew Rector — who scored 24 touchdowns as the freshman team running back last year — recorded two interceptions in the win, including one on the final play that sealed the win.

With running mate Ronnie VanDyke sidelined for the year after shoulder surgery, senior two-way starter Andre Simmons had a fumble recovery, a 64-yard run on a fake punt and was on the receiving end of Andrews’ game-winning, 24-yard touchdown toss.

Washington-Lee, meanwhile, suffered a costly 30-point home loss to McLean. Senior Karl Lendenmann broke his radius in the loss and was expected to be one of the Generals’ main contributors. Junior quarterback Richard Lewis was effective under center, going 12-for-17 with 131 yards, a touchdown and an interception and junior running back Anthony Taylor used a 52-yard score to highlight a 91-yard night. Still, the loss of Lendenmann is troubling.

Stone Bridge (1-0) at Heritage (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
The Bulldogs and Pride have not played since Stone Bridge moved to the Northern Region, but met back-to-back years in 2003 and 2004. The Bulldogs won those games by a combined 86-3, but Heritage was just opening and was 5-15 its first two years.

Three of the Pride’s next four seasons yielded winning records, including a 6-4 campaign in 2008. Their quarterback in that most-recent run, then-sophomore Brian Rody, is the new starter for the Bulldogs, an intriguing little wrinkle.

In his first Stone Bridge start, he was 5-for-11 passing with 51 yards and an interception, but that came on 4th-and-long. He captained a 21-18 home win over 2007 Division 6 state champion Westfield.

Bulldog junior running back Marcus Harris carried 21 times for a game-high 83 yards in the win. Senior Spenser Rositano ran for a touchdown, was on the receiving end of a WR-Pass, 66-yard touchdown and blocked the game-tying field goal with under a minute remaining.

Last week, Heritage took a 14-0, first-quarter lead over Broad Run, the defending Division 4 state champion, before allowing 23 unanswered points to lose, 23-14. The Pride need another start like it had in Week 1 to hang with the Bulldogs, but also need to hold the opposing running back in-check more than last week, as well. They gave up 263 yards and two touchdowns to Spartan senior T.J. Peeler.

T.C. Williams (0-1) at Mount Vernon (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
This match-up features a pair of teams in desperate need of a morale boost.

T.C. Williams jumped out to a 23-14 halftime lead last week at Robinson before allowing 22 unanswered points via an unrelenting rushing attack in the second half. Mount Vernon, meanwhile, gained just 40 total yards on 47 plays, including -3 yards on 18 second-half snaps, in a 42-3 road loss to rival West Potomac.

Last year, the Majors snapped a five-game losing streak to the Titans, spoiling the ribbon-cutting at T.C. Williams’ new home field. Quarterback Brian Green ran for the game-winning 10-yard touchdown run on the second possession of the first overtime in Mount Vernon’s 23-20 win. The Majors’ top three running backs accounted for 225 yards on 51 carries.

The Mount Vernon offensive line is completely new and struggled against West Potomac last week. If T.C. Williams can get pressure on quarterback Andrew Sable and spring its speedy senior running back, Cortez Taylor, like it did last week, the Titans will be in great position to avenge last year’s Week 1 loss.

T.C. Williams’ second-half performance will be the determinant, though. In its last 11 games, it is has blown six second-half leads.

West Springfield (1-0) at Oakton (1-0), 7:30 p.m.
Last season, West Springfield’s promising season came to an abrupt end, 49-43, in the Division 6 semifinals at Oakton. The Cougars went on to win the Division 6 Northern Region championship, while the Spartans lost 10 starters and their head coach in the offseason.

In Week 1, though, West Springfield could not have looked more impressive under new sheriff in town, former Marshall Coach J.T. Biddison. Aside from two long touchdowns allowed in the first 13 minutes, the Spartans locked down the Eagles’ potent offense, sacking the quarterback six times and holding the starting running back to 33 yards on 15 carries.

Meanwhile, they controlled the game offensively, driving for points on two second-half possessions of 13 plays or more to salt the game away. West Springfield deployed a dual-quarterback system, showcasing junior Matt Prokop and senior Eric Schauder, and both proved more than effective. Starting running back Dan Collins was sidelined with an injury, but will return for Oakton.

The Cougars, in the Outback Bowl, pitched a shutout. Oakton beat Madison, 14-0, featuring a completely new offensive backfield, but the same starting offensive line as the regional championship team in 2008. Junior quarterback Jimmy Boone, in his first varsity start, played mistake-free, going 8-for-14 passing for 144 yards and a 44-yard touchdown connection with junior running back Luke Willis.

Boone also carried 11 times for 66 yards and a score.

Last year’s playoff game was the first time these teams had met since the 2002 regular season, a 24-10 Cougar win. For Oakton to continue its run of success, it will need to be more disciplined than last week — it yielded 11 penalties for 90 yards — and find a way to bring down the mobile West Springfield quarterbacks.

West Springfield needs a repeat of the Week 1 defensive performances — sans the two 70-plus-yard early touchdowns — and continue to run the ball well behind senior tackle Mike Justice and the offensive line.

This promises to be one of the more exciting games of Week 2.

West Potomac (1-0) at Westfield (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
DigitalSports Game of the Week
Statistically, no team was as impressive in Week 1 as West Potomac.

Returning all five starting offensive linemen, but only senior receivers Shawn Lee and Will Rosenkranz out wide, there was a gaping hole with the departure of quarterback Cole Walter. Wolverine senior quarterback Colin Mathewson, who lost only two games in three years starting on freshman and junior varsity, was 13-for-19 passing for 234 yards and four touchdowns in the first half alone. He finished with 292 passing yards.

Senior slot receiver Deandre Essex came out of nowhere with eight receptions for 189 yards and two scores. Lee added seven receptions for 65 yards and score. Centreville-transfer, senior running back Darel Layne carried 13 times for 85 yards and a score — all in the first half. Defensively, senior outside linebacker Shakil White had three sacks and two fumble recoveries.

West Potomac allowed Mount Vernon to gain only 40 yards on 47 plays, including negative-three yards on 18 plays in the second half.

Westfield, for its part, visited 2007 Division 5 state champion and two-time defending regional champion Stone Bridge for a marquee opening-week game. It lost, 21-18, on a blocked field goal in the final minute, and only had 10 fewer offensive yards than the Ashburn Bulldogs.

Senior wide receivers Gary Turner and Aaron Scoville each had six receptions, with Turner notching 116 yards and a touchdown, Scoville 39 yards. Sophomore running back Kendall Anderson — younger brother of graduated Bulldog running back Jordan Anderson (James Madison) — rushed four times for 47 yards, including a 42-yard touchdown, in his varsity debut.

The only all-time match-up between these teams came in the 2007 Division 6 regional semifinals, a game Westfield won handily, 41-7, en route to its second state championship.

For the Wolverines to win, they need Mathewson to continue to get his receivers the ball in space and the offensive line to provide similarly powerful performance.

For the Bulldogs to win, junior rover Harry Van Trees needs to be equally as disruptive as he was last week and the running game needs to repeat their 6.9 yards per carry against a much bigger defensive front.

While a loss would be costly for either team, a win is more vital for Westfield. It would be 0-2 with a road game at Lake Braddock next week and the Concorde District schedule starting three weeks thereafter.
 
Yorktown (1-0) at Madison (0-1), 7:30 p.m.
The Patriots and Warhawks met twice last season, with Madison taking both the aggregate score, 33-30, and the game that mattered.

Yorktown won the regular-season meeting on the road, 23-7, but fell at home in the playoffs, 26-7.

Last week, though, the Patriots unveiled their new spread offense and showed they are ahead of the learning curve. Fourth-string quarterback, 5-foot-6 junior defensive back Jordan Smith stepped in for injured starter Sam Nottingham and completed 15 of his 30 passes for 177 yards for two touchdowns and an interception. Senior wide receiver, a returning all-region honoree, Mike Veith had a game-high nine receptions for 100 yards and a score.

Senior fullback Erik Cardillo carried nine times for 61 yards and two scores in Yorktown’s 36-14 win over Wilson (D.C.).

Madison, in the Outback Bowl, fell to Vienna-rival Oakton for the sixth time in the last seven years, 14-0, on the road. While the Warhawks minimized mistakes — committing just two penalties and one turnover — they struggled to move threaten the Cougars offensively. They only had two plays longer than 10 yards and none longer than 20.

Senior quarterback Eric Roland was 16-for-32 passing for 109 yards and no interceptions.

Yorktown will put up points, new offensive scheme and missing starters notwithstanding. If Madison can keep up and create turnovers, this game is up for grabs. If the Patriots get behind early and the Warhawks are responsible with the ball, Yorktown may struggle to stop the power running game of Madison.

The Patriots held the Tigers to 57 rushing yards on 20 carries, but the Warhawks feature a much more imposing running game.

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Football: South County 23, Chantilly 21

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

The Stallions let victory slip away Friday — twice.

Leading by three points with 1 minute, 11 seconds left, an errant punt snap was recovered in the end zone by Charger senior Seehoon Lee to put visiting Chantilly ahead by four.

A 32-yard leaping reception by South County senior Oyinemi Iyebote over a defender put the hosts in-range for a game-winning strike. But, seconds later, said game-winning strike from senior Aaron Andrews bounced off Iyebote’s chest and fell incomplete in the end zone on 3rd-and-10.

But on the next snap, the Chantilly secondary forgot about Dre.

The Stallions called the exact same play that got Iyebote open before the drop. This time, the cornerback covering senior Andre Simmons followed Iyebote on his crossing route.

Andrews found Simmons, lonely with :08 left, in the front corner of the end zone for a 24-yard touchdown, lifting South County over Chantilly, 23-21.

“We just believe. We run that play quite a lot, it’s just double switches,” Stallion Coach Pete Bendorf said. “We hit it last year against Lee for a touchdown in the same situation. I told Aaron, ‘Just read the corner.’

“This time he ran with Oyinemi down the middle and that opened up Andre down the sideline.”

Added Andrews, 14-for-28 passing for 208 yards and two scores: “It’s a progression read. My coach taught us to make my read and things like that. That’s what I did: I stayed calm, I made my read and [the corner] ended up coming over.”

Just minutes before Simmons’ winning reception from Andrews, fate appeared to have decided the game for the Chargers.

Despite outgaining Chantilly 357-206, Lee’s fumble recovery in the end zone left South County trailing, 21-17, with possession at its own 31-yard line with 1:06 remaining.

Andrews took the field needing to lead the team 69 yards in 66 seconds with no timeouts.

“That’s what coach has been teaching us. When things go bad, never give up,” he said. “That’s our motto: Handle adversity. That’s what Coach Bendorf told me before we came out here for warm-ups. He told me, ‘Hey, handle adversity.’

“That’s what ended up happening.”

It also happened last week at South County’s final scrimmage when junior Ronnie VanDyke reaggravated a shoulder injury that will require season-ending surgery to repair.

VanDyke, already a recipient of five Division I scholarship offers, was expected to star at defensive back and wide receiver entering the season.

Simmons, VanDyke’s running mate in the secondary, himself has eight scholarships offers. In VanDyke’s absence, it was critical he double his playmaking efforts, especially in the season-opener Friday.

Simmons not only caught the game-winning touchdown, but also recovered a second-quarter fumble at the Chantilly 34. He then ran 64 yards on a fake punt that set up a go-ahead score in the second half.

“Andre played huge, a fake punt for a big gain and when we had to have a big play, he provided the spark,” Bendorf said. “He has senior leadership. That’s why a lot of schools are recruiting him. We just had to have him and we played him both ways on a hot night. My hat is off to him.”

Added Simmons, with 88 all-purpose on only two offensive touches: “Ronnie is a major contributor, he’s a major contributor. We’ve got some young guys now and I think I need to do more leadership.

“I’m not the most vocal guy — that’s [Andrews] right here — I try to lead by example. Tonight I knew I had to pick it up.”

Box Score              1    2    3    4     —    F  
Chantilly                0    7    0   14    —   21
South County       7    0   10   6     —   23

Scoring Plays                               
1Q — SC —
Doublet 51 from Andrews (Curtade kick) — 8:06
2Q — CH — Romine 4 run (Hutzel kick) — 3:16
3Q SC — Newell 3 from Jordan (Curtade kick) — 2:45
3Q SC — Curtade 31 FG — 0:22
4Q — CH — Martin 32 from Voorhies (Hutzel kick) — 5:56
4Q — CH — Lee fumble recovery in end zone (Hutzel kick) — 1:11
4Q — SC — Simmons 24 from Andrews (kick blocked) — 0:08

Passing
CH – Romine – 8-for-15, 59 yards, 2 INT; Voorhies – 1-for-2, 32 yards, TD.  SC – Andrews – 14-for-28, 208 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT; Jordan – 1-for-1, 3 yards, TD.
Rushing
CH – Farris – 13 car, 60 yards; Hill – 5 car, 21 yards; Romine – 13 car, 14 yards, TD; Rudorfer – 6 car, 10 yards; Hicks – 2 car, 10 yards.  SC – Simmons – 1 car, 64 yards; Winbush – 7 car, 36 yards; Jordan – 15 car, 31 yards; Andrews – 6 car, 15 yards; Josephs – 1 car, 0 yards.
Receiving
CH – Voorhies – 3 rec, 37 yards; Martin – 2 rec, 36 yards, TD; Huelskamp – 1 rec, 9 yards; Farris – 2 rec, 4 yards; Simms – 1 rec, 4 yards.  SC – Iyebote – 3 rec, 65 yards; Vane – 5 rec, 55 yards; Doublet – 2 rec, 53 yards, TD; Simmons – 1 rec, 24 yards, TD; Jordan – 2 rec, 6 yards; Stein – 1 rec, 5 yards; Newell – 1 rec, 3 yards, TD.

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Football: Concorde District Preview

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, DigitalSports.com

**Teams are listed alphabetically.

CENTREVILLE

Last Year: 1-9 (0-7)

Coach: Gerry Pannoni, 7-14 at Centreville

Returning Starters: 7 offense/8 defense

Key Losses: OL/DL Luke Bowanko (Virginia), LB Mike Upham (Monmouth), TE Zach Glatter (Princeton)

Somehow, the Concorde \team that returns the most starters is still its youngest.

Three Centreville freshman started or saw significant playing time last year: Linebacker Ken Hickenham, receiver Chase Walter and Connor Coward, a cornerback and receiver that Wildcat Coach Gerry Pannoni calls his best athlete.

The trio is part of 12 sophomores that started the first scrimmage this preseason against T.C. Williams, joining linemen Justin Baker and Matt Lee, as well as dual backfield threat Greg Fields, a transfer from Paul VI.

Sophomore linebacker and running back Manny Smith tore his MCL at the end of last season, but is fully recovered.

One starter that is still in his recovery phase is senior quarterback Cam Walter,
who tore his labrum in April and will not play full-time until at least
Week 3. While junior Chance Roman, who throws a very catchable ball,
will be his replacement, Pannoni said Cam Walter’s on-field leadership
is irreplaceable.

“When Cam plays, our team is at a different level,” Pannoni said. “In terms of on the
field, he’s the one that makes everything happen. He’s the one that
takes control of everything on the field.

“Without him on the field, we
don’t necessary have a quarterback that’s going to do that right now.”

The two standout seniors on the roster, aside from the signal caller,
will be needed to lead this young unit into the region’s most difficult
schedule.

Wide receiver Warren Denny is
an exceptional talent and returning first-team all-district selection.
While Pannoni is going to try to limit him to offense-only, Denny may seem
some time at defensive back, where he played last year. He had 20
receptions in two preseason games.

Offensive lineman and linebacker Holland Anderson
will play both sides of the ball, although Pannoni would rather save
his energy. But Anderson’s talents — and his 6-foot-3, 220-pound frame
— are needed on offense and defense.

Senior leadership will be vital for the Wildcats, who face the
toughest-schedule in the Northern Region, by far. Their average
opponent had 8.2 wins last season. Only one other team, West
Springfield, has a schedule with opponents averaging more than 6.9 wins.

“In our 10-game schedule, there are nine playoff teams and the one non-playoff team is Robinson,”
Pannoni said. “You better consider them a playoff team. If they don’t
beat you, they’ll beat the snot out of you. They’re always a good team.”

Game to Watch: Week 5: Oct. 2 vs Mount Vernon

CHANTILLY

Last Year: 9-4 (5-2)

Coach: Mike Lalli, 5th year, 46-46 career record, 31-17 at Chantilly

Returning Starters: 2 offense/1 defense

Key Losses: RB Torrian Pace (Youngstown State), LB/OG Isaac Sine (Marist), QB Roger Strittmatter, OT Andrew Crawford, C Brendan Murphy

Due to unparalleled roster depth, high turnover means less in the Concorde District than elsewhere. Robinson won the state title in 2001 after graduating 43 starters the prior season. And Westfield graduated 21 starters from its state-championship team before last year and still was “upset” by Chantilly in the regional semifinals — fans don’t storm the field for games they expect to win.

Hopefully, those stories serve as encouragement for the Chargers. They only return three total starters from their regional runner-up team from a year ago.

All five starting lineman, the starting quarterback and a two-time first-team all-state running back are gone from the offensive side of the ball alone.

“There’s
a large learning curve for some of our guys,” fifth-year coach Mike Lalli said. “It’s not that guys didn’t play
at all. We have juniors that played. But as far as starting, we didn’t
have much there.

“It’s going to be a big transition this year.”

Two offensive guards, seniors Matt Soroko and Matt Bradenburg, have game experience and will be looked up onfor leadership. Joining them on the line is junior Brian Morrow, a junior varsity star from last season.

Senior linebacker Danny Lauro will play a similar role on defense as the two Charger guards on the line. Junior defensive tackles Nick Peccleston and Dante Verme were season-long JV starters in 2008 and now make up the starting varsity interior line.

Two-way senior Kris Martin and the only defensive starter back. He will line up in the secondary and at wide receiver.

Running back is the biggest question mark for Chantilly, not for what it returns, but for what it lost. Three-year starter Torrian Pace rushed for 2,717 yards on
290 carries and scored 33
touchdowns as a senior, the 11th-highest yardage total in Virginia High School League history.

Lalli said his new crop of running backs are smaller than Pace, but are faster. Seniors Mike Ferris and Kevin Rudorfer will assume that duty. With the quarterback position still up for grabs, establishing the running game is more critical for the Chargers than any other team.

But Lalli said they not hide behind a completely new starting lineup and accept mediocrity.

“The
expectation here is to always to make the playoffs,” he said. “We feel that
anything can happen in the playoffs. From our experience, [in 2006], we
weren’t expecting to win and made it to the state title game.

“The
next year when we expected to win and lost in the first round. We feel
like if we can get to the playoffs, good things can happen from there.
That’s the expectation at our school, to make it to the playoffs every
year.”

Game to Watch: Week 8: Oct. 23 at Westfield

HERNDON
Last Year: 6-5 (3-3)
Coach: Joe Sheaffer, 3rd year, 11-10 career record
Returning Starters: 6 offense/6 defense
Key Losses: OT/DT Jake Feldman, LB/TE Zach Leach, OG/DE Mustafa Morrad

Since the final two weeks of 2007 — home wins over Robinson and Oakton — Herndon is 8-5 and has added victories over Centreville and Westfield to its resume. There has not between a below-.500 season for the region’s second-most northern team since 2002.

And constantly putting together competitive seasons has caused the rest of the Concorde District to take notice.

“There kind of like the quiet giant out there,” one rival coach said. “They keep getting
better each year. Coach [Joe] Sheaffer is taking charge and I definitely
respect them. And I think they’re going to step up this year.”

Sheaffer, in his third season, claims he — and the Hornets — are well aware of the attention

“They know that. Our kids are confident that if they keep getting
better, we can compete with anybody we play with,” he said. “I think the biggest
thing we have to get these kids to understand, too, is that just
because we had some success last year and we have a bunch of kids
coming back, doesn’t mean we’re just going to be walking out there and
doing all these things that they want to do without putting in the
work.”

Where the most work is needed, according to Sheaffer, is along the offensive and defensive line, where graduation hit Herndon hardest.

Second-team all-region two-way tackle Jake Feldman and guard-defensive end Mustafa Morrad headline the departures. While third-year starting quarterback, senior Zack Ozycz, senior wide receiver Nick Impellizzeri and senior running back Devon Thompson all return, Sheaffer recognizes the importance of lineman to Concorde success.

“There’s a lot of pros and cons there,” he said of his 12 returning starters. “A lot of the kids we have coming
back, obviously, are skill kids. That obviously makes us farther along
than where we’ve been as far as those kids go: Receiver, running back,
fullback, quarterback [and] defensive back.

“The cons are that the kids we
lost are the kids we’re having a real big issue replacing are on the
line. In our district, that’s huge.”

One player Sheaffer said will be an X-factor is junior guard Steven Singh. Singh starred on junior varsity last year, but made two varsity appearances. Also, junior Ronnie Cooke will fill holes at linebacker and fullback. While Sheaffer said he may not start, he will see big-time minutes on both sides of the ball.

Under center, Ozycz learned a deeper playback for the second-consecutive offseason. With so many linemen to replace, Sheaffer stressed the importance of a consistent passing game, which would take defensive players out of the box.

Expect Ozycz, one of three returning starting quarterbacks in the district, to have more depth on his drops and mix in more play-action this year.

His favorite targets will be Impellizzeri, his No. 1 receiver last year, and senior receiver Abi-Drey Totow will see more offensive snaps to utilize his 6-foot-2 frame. Senior receiver Brian Curran did not play last year, but will figure into the mix.

Thompson, too, will often see the ball coming his way through the air.

“He’s a running back, but he’s probably one of our best receivers,” Sheaffer said. “We’ll try to get the ball in his hands as much as we can in the slot position.”

Game to Watch: Week 7: Oct. 16 vs Oakton

OAKTON

Last Year: 13-1 (7-0), Division 6 Northern Region champion

Coach: Joe Thompson, 7th year, 51-20 career record

Returning Starters: 7 offense/2 defense

Key Losses:
RB Trey Watts, RB Jon Meadows, QB Chris Coyer (Temple), LB Jack Tyler,
LB Joey McCallum, WR Jay Young; TE Wade Reynolds; DB Kevin Culkin

A summer removed from its third Northern Region championship this
decade, Oakton has its entire offensive line back in tact.

And that’s
about it.

The Cougars return just two defensive starters. And a pair of wide
receivers is all that returns offensively, aside from the linemen.

On that line, though, senior center Austin Mayhugh and senior guard Jonathan Hart
each received all-region recognition in 2008. And, defensively, one of
the two returning starters was an all-state defensive back, senior Andrew Leonard. Senior down lineman Scott Stangeby is the other returner.

Junior Jimmy Boone steps up to replace Chris Coyer, now at Temple, and is absolutely loved by the Cougar staff. He is the only non-senior team captain.

Two two-year starters leave at running back, so juniors Luke Willis and Jordan Willetts and senior Mike Greene can expect to see the bulk of the carries. Senior receivers Matt Chandler and Ray Goins — who will double as a place kicker — are the only two offensive returners aside from the linemen.

Even with such high defensive turnover and new pieces at the skill positions, seventh-year Oakton Coach Joe Thompson has not lowered the expectations for this team.

“Obviously, [last year’s players] wanted to win championships and this
group does, too” he said. “We start with that goal in mind that we want
to win championships, but the reality is: The way to win those
championships is to win reps, win plays, win a quarter. In order to do
those things, we have to go as hard as we can every play. I felt like
there were times before 2008 where our teams didn’t do that, and it
cost us games.

“Last year, their ‘Finish 15 as 1’ was built off of a concept that they
have to concentrate and get through every rep, so that they can keep
playing. As a group, they didn’t want to give up that opportunity to
play together. These guys want to finish.”

Game to Watch: Week 5: Oct. 2 vs Edison

ROBINSON
Last Year: 5-5 (3-3)
Coach: Mark Bendorf, 13th year, 111-30 career record
Returning Starters: 6 offense/6 defense
Key Losses: RB Alex Murray, RB Wynton Fox, QB
Timmy Meier. DE Jordan Stanton (James Madison), DE Ryan Holder
(Georgetown)

In 2007, Robinson sneaked into the playoffs with a 5-5 record, but beat defending state runner-up Chantilly and was a last-minute field goal from beating West Springfield.

Then, last season, it led eventual regional champion Oakton, 21-9, late in the first half before a last-second, second-quarter score spurred the Cougars to a come-from-behind, 12-point victory.

Still, the Rams rebounded with back-to-back wins over Herndon and Fairfax in which Robinson combined for 90 points. It just missed the playoffs at 5-5, leaving many wondering what could have been.

“Were we happy with turning in our stuff before Thanksgiving? No. But
you have to decide what you’re going to use as your measuring stick,” 13th-year Ram Coach Mark Bendorf said.
“The amount of improvement we made last year was very satisfying from a
coaching standpoint.

“Bottom line is that it would be very interesting
to think if we got a playoff berth to see what we could have done.
Because with what we were doing at the end, you never know.”

To keep their pads on in November, Robinson needs to find quick replacements for a trio of three-year starters in the backfield. Running backs Alex Murray (1,200 yards) and Wynton Fox (913 yards), as well as quarterback Timmy Meier, all depart and bring with them a wealth of experience.

Bendorf says the Rams will be without a specific feature back, but will have carries split amongst a quartet of backs, including senior two-way contributor Connor Riley, who had 15 carries for 75 yards last year. Speedy senior Jared Velasquez, senior Alex Lapian and junior Kambulu “K.B.” Musokotwane will all get carries, too.

Out wide, 6-foot-4 standout junior Matt Zanellato is entering his third year as a starter and made second-team all-region as a sophomore in 2008. He had 21 receptions for 346 yards and two scores. Expect a steep increase in numbers as Bendorf finds more ways to get him touches.

Having such a reliable target will shorten the learning curve for junior quarterback Mike LoPresti, who made two appearances last year. Bendorf praised LoPresti’s intellect and his offseason dedication.

Defensively, the Rams look to replace a pair of Division I defensive ends: Jordan Stanton (James Madison), who made the all-state team, and Ryan Holder (Georgetown).

Leading that effort is three-year starting linebacker, senior Brian Laiti, who is committed to Virginia Tech. He made a team-high 147 tackles last year, but Bendorf hopes those around Laiti chip into that total in 2009.

“I’d prefer he’d not have to make that many tackles and would get a
little more productivity out of his teammates and I think that he will,” Bendorf said. “He’s picking up tendencies, he’s diagnosing things, he’s recognizing
things and communicating back to his teammates.

“He’s making sure that
everybody is lined up right, he’s picking up pull tendencies, he’s
picking up route releases. The biggest thing he’s offered right now is
on game night when the coaches can’t cross that white line.”

If years past serve as any kind of example, early-season wins are imperative for the Ram postseason. But area coaches agree that those wins will determine Robinson’s playoff seeding, not its entry.

“They have that wide receiver that everyone knows about. But their tight end and running backs look like grown men,” an out-of-district coach said. “I think they’ll definitely be lock for the playoffs this year, if not pushing for a top seed.”

Game to Watch: Week 7: Oct. 16 vs Westfield

WESTFIELD

Last Year: 9-3 (5-2)

Coach: Tom Verbanic, 10th year, 170-53 career record, 88-18 at Westfield

Returning Starters: 3 offense/1 defense

Key Losses: RB Jordan Anderson, LB/FB Ben Casper, OL Tyler Barfield (Virginia Tech walk-on), OL Tyler Delph, OL Jacob Ryder, WR Cole McInturff, WR/DB Zach Sargent, DE Charlie Ohrnberger, C Tommy Verbanic

It serves as no surprise that the school with the largest student population in Virginia usually has the largest number of graduating seniors. But that also means it has the largest pool of underclassmen from which to find replacements.

Westfield only returns four starters, but has a handful of rising juniors and seniors that are as talented as any in Northern Virginia.

Leading the charge are two of those returners, senior quarterback Danny Fenyak and senior linebacker Dylan Doty. Quarterbacks coach Brian Day said Doty will be used much like first-team all-state linebacker Brian Kennedy was during the Bulldogs’ state title run in 2007. Kennedy averaged under 10 carries per game, but averaged over nine yards per carry that season.

Junior left guard Devin Ferguson started two games when Taylor Delph was injured and will be called upon, along side senior left tackle Ryan Knowlan, to lead the offensive front.

The defensive line will be anchored by seniors B.J. Bordley and Daniel Krizay, as well as junior Hunter Paulette, all of whom have varsity playing experience.

In the defensive backfield, seniors Vinnie Caparossi, Nick Grinups and Ryan Sweet aim to shut down opposing district passing attacks that will only have two returning quarterbacks. Junior Harry Van Trees is the only non-senior in the secondary, but will have the same expectations from the coaching staff. Coaching this corps is Class of 2008 graduate, former safety Tucker Karl.

Another alumnus that can be found on the Bulldog practice field is the quarterback of the 2003 state championship team — and that for the 2007 and 2008 ACC champions while at Virginia Tech — Sean Glennon.

“It’s great to have him come through and be out throwing. My arm is all
raggedy now, so it helps me out a lot,” Day joked. “He’s just been out, staying
sharp, helping us out with some things — it’s an extra pair of eyes.
He’s helping us while he’s waiting for the next call.

“It’s good to have receivers catching passes from an NCAA, NFL quarterback. And they better catch the ball because it’s coming.”

Those receivers are seniors Aaron Scoville and Gary Turner, as well as A.J. Winesett and Mack Spees, the backup quarterback. Junior Mitch Castleberry will line up at tight end and senior fullback Kevin Koch, a returning starter, will catch passes out of the backfield.

When Koch is fulfilling his duties as a lead blocker, he will be opening holes for a trio of underclassmen that replace graduated tailback Jordan Anderson (James Madison). Junior Bryan Monticue will be the feature back, with junior Hayden Ferrington getting short-yardage carries.

Sophomore Kendall Anderson — Jordan’s younger brother — is the likely running back of the future, but will get attempts this year. Doty, as mentioned, can also expect 8-10 attempts per game.

Game to Watch: Week 8: Oct. 23 vs Chantilly

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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