Chantilly High School | Archive | December, 2009

Basketball: Pohanka Chantilly Classic

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

*Click the Photo and Video links above for multimedia from the last three games Wednesday at Chantilly.

GAME ONE — Girls’ Seventh Place Game
C.D. Hylton                 11  6  20  8   —  45
Mills Godwin             33 15 27 14  —  89

C.D. Hylton — James 7 1-1 15; Segarra 6 1-2 15; Emma 2 0-0 4; Majette 2 0-0 4; Sampah 1 1-2 3; Ziegler 1 1-2 3; Ashby 0 1-6 1.
Team totals: 19 5-13 45.
Mills Godwin —
Henshaw 7 7-9 22; Sisson 6 6-7 18; Watkins 5 3-3 13;
Geoghegan 5 0-0 10; Shelton 4 2-3 10; Foster 2 0-0 5; Gerndt 2 0-0 5; Stoneburner 2 0-0 4; Ford 0 2-2 2. Team totals: 33 20-24 89.
3-pointers —
C.D. Hylton 2 (Segarra 2); Mills Godwin 3 (Foster, Gerndt, Heanshaw).

GAME TWO — Boys’ Seventh Place Game
West Springfield     13  4  20 23  —  60
Falls Church             13  9  10 21  —  53

West Springfield — Rouse 7 6-10 20; Lester 5 0-1 11; Goel 5 0-1 10; Hadfield 2 1-3 5; Kim 2 0-0 4; Mosley 1 2-4 4; Haase 0 3-4 3; Hassan 0 3-4 3. Team totals: 22 15-27 60.
Falls Church —
Alamin 7 4-8 20; S. Gangele 4 1-3 9; C. Medlej 2 5-6 9;
Walker 2 1-1 6; Slocum
2 0-0 5; P. Gangele 1 0-0 2; M. Medlej 0 2-4 2. Team totals: 18 13-22 53.
3-pointers —
West Springfield 1 (Lester); Falls Church 4 (Alamin 2, Slocum, Walker).

GAME THREE — Girls’ Fifth Place Game
Annandale                 15 11  7   9   9  —  51
Thomas Jefferson  11 11  9  11  2  —  44

Annandale — Diop 3 14-20 20; Hurtado 3 3-6 9; Clarke 4 0-0 8; Hughes 3 1-2 7; Burns 3 0-2 6; Bronn 0 1-2 1.
Team totals: 16 19-32 51.
Thomas Jefferson Eriksson 4 6-8 15; Martinez 5 1-6 11; Cheatham 2 5-6 10; Leibowitz 1 1-2 4; Slatery 2 0-0 4. Team totals: 14 13-22 44.
3-pointers —
Annandale 0; Thomas Jefferson 3 (Cheatham, Eriksson, Leibowitz).

GAME FOUR — Boys’ Fifth Place Game
Mountain View          8 14 13 11  —  46
Thomas Jefferson   6   7   6  13  —  32

Mountain View — Daniel 6 5-6 18; Nakasone 2 3-3 8; Kay 1 3-4 5; Hartman 2 0-1 4; Wilkerson 0 3-4 3; Beckham 1 0-2 2; Johnson 1 0-2 2; Thomas 1 0-0 2; Wilson 1 0-0 2.
Team totals: 15 14-22 46.
Thomas Jefferson —
Barnes 6 1-1 13; Hansen 2 2-2 7;
Perez 1 0-0 3; Corbett 1 0-2 2; Jackson 1 0-0 2; Kuzma 0 2-4 2; Babyak 0 1-4 1; Karn 0 1-2 1; Sofinowski 0 1-3 1. Team totals: 11 8-18 32.
3-pointers —
Mountain View 2 (Daniel, Nakasone); Thomas Jefferson 2 (Hansen, Perez).

GAME FIVE — Girls’ Third Place Game
Loudoun County    27 17 15 13  —  72
George Mason       16 13 21 16  —  66

Loudoun County — Batts 5 8-8 20; Kain 7 1-4 16; Linnemann 5 1-1 12; Strange 5 1-2 11; Holmes 4 0-0 8; Lapple 1 2-2 5.
Team totals: 27 13-17 72.
George Mason —
Thomas 5 6-9 16; Mitchell 6 1-3 14; Cheney 3 7-12 13; Kane 5 1-2 12
; Platenburg 4 1-3 9; Johansen 0 2-2 2. Team totals: 23 18-31 66.
3-pointers —
Loudoun County 5 (Batts 2, Kain, Lapple, Linnemann); George Mason 2 (Kane, Mitchell).

GAME SIX — Boys’ Third Place Game
George Mason       8  12 17 26  —  63
South County        10 13 23 19  —  65

George Mason — Young 6 3-3 19; Stewart 6 2-2 17; Wolfe 3 0-0 9; Cheney 3 1-2 7; Stewart 1 2-2 4; DiChoso 1 1-2 3; Lee 1 0-0 3; Ogle 1 0-0 2. Team totals: 22 9-11 63.
South County —
Butler 6 6-8 18; Jackson 5 5-8 10; Biberaj 5 3-3 13;
Alie-Cox 3 2-7 8; Townsend 2 3-3 8; McNeal 1 0-1 2; Robinson 0 1-3 1. Team totals: 22 20-33 65.
3-pointers —
George Mason 10 (Young 4, Stewart 3, Wolfe 3); South County 1 (Townsend).

GAME SEVEN — Girls’ Championship
Edison                   9  13 17 18  —  57
Chantilly               15 11  3  15  —  44

Edison — Goodwin 10 3-5 25; Dua 4 2-4 10; Graham 1 4-5 7; Watts 3 0-0 7; Sherrill 2 0-2 4; Fiorio 1 0-1 2; Potts 1 0-0 2.
Team totals: 22 9-17 57.
Chantilly —
Hamilton 5 2-5 12; Watson 3 0-0 8; Petrus 2 0-0 6;
Marlette 2 0-0 5; Rowe 2 1-2 5; Hutzell 1 1-2 3; Carey 1 0-1 2; Yates 0 2-2 2; Norwood 0 1-2 1. Team totals: 16 7-14 44.
3-pointers —
Edison 4 (Goodwin 2, Graham, Watts); Chantilly 5 (Petrus 2, Watson 2, Marlette).

GAME EIGHT — Boys’ Championship
Sewickley             5   9   6  14  —  34
Chantilly              16 10 16 10  —  52

Sewickley — Droney 5 7-11 17; Motley 2 0-0 5; Bonomo 2 0-0 4; Palmer 1 1-2 4; Schramm 0 4-6 4.
Team totals: 10 12-19 34.
Chantilly —
Fridy 4 2-2 11; Ballam 3 1-2 8;
Savage 2 4-7 8; Danehower 3 1-1 7; Howerton 2 3-4 7; Huelskamp 2 1-2 5; Caslavka 1 0-0 3; Manning 1 1-1 3; DeWitt 0 0-2 0. Team totals: 18 13-21 52.
3-pointers —
Sewickley Academy 2 (Motley, Palmer); Chantilly 3 (Ballam, Caslavka, Fridy).

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Boys’ Basketball: Mater Dei (CA) 70, Chantilly 67

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

*Click the Photo and Video links above for multimedia from Thursday’s near national shocker.

March Madness nearly struck a few months early at the Gonzaga D.C. Classic.

Chantilly led Mater Dei (Santa Ana, Calif.) by as many as 13 points in the first half and on three separate possessions after halftime.

The Monarchs are ranked No. 10 nationally by USA Today, No. 16 by ESPN Rise.

But turnovers and injuries cost the Chargers, as they fell, 70-67, in the nightcap of the first-round quadruple-header at Gonzaga Prep Thursday night.

“We proved people wrong. People thought we’re not quite there, but I think we showed them tonight,” said 7-foot Chantilly junior John Manning (13 points), one of three Chargers in double figures. “We showed that we can hang with teams like that and it’ll really help us later in the season.”

Added coach Jim Smith: “I really thought at the start of the second half, we were up six or eight, missed a layup down here, an inside shot and then turned it over. Before you know it, they’re up one.

“If we make those plays and keep a little working margin, maybe they panic a little bit and different things happen.”

Chantilly appeared on-par with Mater Dei for all but that early second-half stretch Thursday, a bad omen for the rest of the Northern Region.

The Monarchs feature a trio of seniors signed to the Pac 10.

Guard Gary Franklin (game-high 24 points) is committed to California University at Berkeley, guard Tyler Lamb (20 points) is headed to UCLA and swingman Max Hooper (five points), limited by foul trouble, will choose between Stanford and Notre Dame.

Franklin is ranked No. 66 in the ESPNU 100. Lamb is No. 38.

Notable alumni included David and Travis Wear (North Carolina), D.J. Strawberry (Maryland), LeRon Ellis (Syracuse), Jamal Sampson (Cal), Cedric Bozeman (UCLA) and Miles Simon (Arizona), the Most Outstanding Player in the 1997 NCAA Tournament.

“They’re very good and any mistake you make, you pay for,” Smith said. “They took us out of our offense a lot and we struggled at times, but the kids fought and clawed. We found some ways to make some plays down the stretch to keep ourselves in it.

“They’re so quick and their players are so interchangeable, they’re switching players on screens. They make it hard for you to run your offense. They’re very good.”

The Chargers did all that without a full roster in the game’s pivotal stages.

Junior forward Jake Weigand, an anticipated post presence, was lost two weeks before the season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament.

Junior guard Kethan Savage, too, was less than 100-percent. He injured his groin late in an 18-point win over Yorktown Tuesday. Savage posted 13 first-quarter points Thursday, but was hobbled the rest of the night. He still had a team-high 21 points.

That considered, Chantilly had a possession to tie in the closing seconds. Mater Dei missed the front end of a one-and-one with :12 seconds remaining, up by three.

The ball was flipped upcourt to senior Matt DeWitt, standing in the corner, behind the arc — very similar to his position before hitting a game-winning 3-pointer at Westfield last year.

But pressure from Lamb forced a game-clinching turnover, abruptly smothering the Chargers’ upset bid.

“Had he caught it cleanly, he might have seen Adam [Fridy] was open on the other wing, might have been able to hit him across on the diagonal,” Smith said. “But all you can ask for in a situation where you’re down seven or eight is to play the situation right and have a shot to tie.

“We had a possession there to tie. I thought that was a nice sign.”

Mater Dei (5-0) faces WCAC power Bishop McNamara (3-2) Friday in the tournament semifinals at 5 p.m. Chantilly (2-1) draws Iona Prep (New Rochelle, N.Y.) (1-1) in the consolation bracket at 8:30 p.m.

Mater Dei    19 14 22 15  —  70
Chantilly      17 22 13 15  —  67

Mater Dei — Franklin 5 11-12 24; Lamb 9 1-3 20; King 6 0-0 12; Hooper 2 0-0 5; Reinhardt 2 0-0 4; Stangl 1 0-1 3; Cook 1 0-0 2.
Team totals: 26 12-16 70.
Chantilly Savage 9 1-2 21; Fridy 5 2-2 15; Manning 6 1-2 13; Ballam 2 2-2 7; DeWitt 2 0-0 6; Howerton 1 3-4 5. Team totals: 25 9-12 67.
3-pointers —
Mater Dei 6 (Franklin 3, Hooper, Lamb, Stangl); Chantilly 8 (Fridy 3, DeWitt 2, Savage 2, Ballam).

Thursday Results (USA Today national rankings)
Calvert Hall (Baltimore) def. Sidwell Friends (Washington, D.C.), 63-43
No. 17 Gonzaga (Washington, D.C.) def. Jesuit Prep (Dallas), 83-69
Bishop McNamara (Forestville, Md.) def. Iona Prep (New Rochelle, N.Y.), 64-59
No. 10 Mater Dei (Santa Ana, Calif.) def. Chantilly (Virginia), 70-67

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Girls’ Basketball: Red Jenkins Tipoff Classic

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

*Click the Photo and Video links above for multimedia from both of Thursday’s games.


McLean 41, Chantilly 34

*Click HERE for video from McLean and Chantilly only.
*Click
HERE for photos from McLean and Chantilly only.

McLean beat Chantilly, 41-34, in both teams’ season-opener Thursday and needed just seven made field goals to do it.

The Highlanders hit three shots from the floor in the first half, four in the second. Four of the seven shots made were 3-pointers.

McLean shot 23-for-43 from the free-throw to overcome a 12-point first-half deficit at the Red Jenkins Tipoff Classic at Woodson.

“We were trying to figure out how to play against them because they were so aggressive,” said Highlander junior Andie Romness, whose nine points tied for the game high. “Our coach told us before the game that we would make mistakes.

“Once we got over, I guess, the thrill of losing the ball, we started to relax more and hit our shots.”

They also locked things down defensively.

The Chargers were held to four fourth-quarter points, two in the final seven minutes. Both of those were free throws.

The Highlanders, meanwhile, were in the double-bonus with :50 seconds left in the third quarter.

“We were basically just denying the ball,” Romness said. “They just kept fouling and everything. We got so many free throws.”

McLean faces former district foe Woodson (1-0) in the tournament finale Saturday at 5 p.m. The Highlanders lost both match-ups with the Cavaliers last year.

Chantilly looks to rebound against Langley (0-1) Saturday at 3:15 p.m.

Chantilly       9 13  8   4   —  34
McLean        8  6  13 14  —  41

Chantilly — Rowe 3 1-1 7; Carey 1 3-4 5; Hutzell 2 0-0 5; K. Norwood 2 1-2 5; Knecht 2 0-0 4; T. Norwood 1 2-2 4; Marlette 1 1-3 3; Yates 0 1-2 1. Team totals: 12 9-14 34.
McLean —
Romness 2 3-8 9; Sutherland 2 3-4 9; Wilson 1 7-11 9; Mundy 1 2-4 4; Pascoe 1 2-4 4; Bettner 0 3-4 3; Baker 0 1-3 1; Kanuit 0 1-2 1; McCray 0 1-2 1; Kelty 0 0-1 0. Team totals: 7 23-43 41.
3-pointers —
Chantilly 1 (Hutzel); McLean 4 (Romness 2, Sutherland 2).

Woodson 42, Langley 35
*Click HERE for video from Woodson and Langley only.
*Click HERE for photos from Woodson and Langley only.

Langley senior standout Kristen Kody fouled out, though on the floor just 13 minutes, 38 seconds Thursday, and the Woodson guards capitalized.

Cavalier junior Taylor Hayes had a game-high 12 points and freshman Keara Finnerty added 11 off the bench as they beat their former district-rival Saxons, 42-35, in the night cap of the Red Jenkins Tipoff Classic.

“We just tried to play hard and play together … Kristen is a captain and an important player on our team,” said first-year Langley coach Tim Anderson of Kody, who committed her fifth foul :25 seconds into the fourth quarter. “But everybody has to step up and we stepped up quite a bit in the third quarter.

“Fourth quarter, we were down by four or five and, after a while, we had some turnovers, missed a couple shots and they finished things at the line.”

Tied at 27 through three quarters, Woodson scored 15 fourth-quarter points, allowing eight, to pull away.

Hayes and Finnerty combined to shoot 12-for-14 on free throws — 10-for-12 after halftime to maintain the lead.

All of Hayes’ seven successful attempts came in the second half.

“The clutch free throws are really important to hit, that’s for sure,” she said. “When the teams come out and try to foul you, you have to hit your free throws. That’s what we were doing really well.

“And, also, you get really tired at the end of the game, but it’s really important to push through. That’s what we did. I think we did a great job of that.”

Langley      11  9   7   8   —  35
Woodson    8  12  7 15  —  42

Langley — Doherty 2 4-6 8; Kody 2 2-2 8; Gallagher 2 2-4 7; Pembroke 1 2-4 4; Goettman 1 1-2 3; Kleinknecht 1 0-0 3; Wolaver 1 0-1 2. Team totals: 10 11-17 35.
Woodson —
Hayes 2 7-8 12; Finnerty 3 5-6 11; Murray 3 1-3 7; Gallo 2 0-0 4; Bouchard 1 0-0 3; Fogg 1 0-4 2; Sitts 1 0-0 2; Brown 0 1-2 1. Team totals: 13 14-23 42.
3-pointers — Langley 4 (Kody 2, Gallagher, Kleinknecht); Woodson 2 (Bouchard, Hayes).

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Football: Top 10 Plays — 2009 Season

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

Previous Weeks’ Top 10s:

Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7

Week 8
Week 9
Week 10
Week 11
Week 12

2009 Season Top 10 Plays
Honorable Mentions
6 for 8
Stone Bridge won its sixth regional title in eight seasons, riding junior tailback Marcus Harris to do it. Harris will ultimately break the single-season school record for carries by 100 and scored three touchdowns for the Bulldogs in the regional final.
2-Point Stop Lifts McLeanMcLean equaled the best single-season turnaround for a winless team when it beat Langley by one in overtime in Week 10. The Highlanders needed this two-point stop by Riley Beiro and Thomas Overby to beat the Saxons in the Rotary Cup for the first time in over a decade.
C.T. ScanT.C. Williams senior Cortez Taylor locked up first-team all-region kick returner with return touchdowns in high-profile games against Robinson and Lake Braddock (here). The Titans were inches from their first playoff berth since 1996.
Scooter ScootsWest Potomac’s only Patriot District win was a memorable one. It beat Lee, 16-14, in Week 7 without scoring an offensive point. A safety, interception return touchdown and this safety-kick return by Daryl Copeland lifted the Wolverines to a thrilling home win.
Powers’ PowersMadison junior fullback Ben Powers dragged Jefferson defenders for 10 yards before leaving 11 bodies in his wake on a 42-yard touchdown run. The Warhawks beat the Colonials, 34-7, in Week 8.
Beiro Circus GrabBattling a litany of injuries, McLean senior Riley Beiro found a way to contribute significantly against Marshall in Week 7. Beiro went one-on-one with a defensive back and pulled down this juggling, 23-yard reception for a score just before halftime. The Highlanders avoided the upset, 24-21.
Citizen CopeCopeland struck again in Week 8, recording seven receptions for 245 yards and four touchdowns at T.C. Williams. It was the best single-game performance for a receiver this year.


No. 10 — Scrambles, Over Easy
O’Sick
Herndon senior quarterback Zack Ozycz was given a shotgun snap when he ordered one under-center. No worries, though. Ozycz fielded the ball on the bounce and, with 10 Jefferson defenders in-tow, found a corner and traversed 63 yards for a touchdown. The Hornets scored 61 points in this Week 1, a single-game best this year.

Nebrich Six
Lake Braddock junior quarterback Michael Nebrich eludes a certain sack and travels the width of the field for a 53-yard score at Annandale in Week 8. Nebrich accounted for six touchdowns — three rushing — in the win.

No. 9 — Special Special Teams
Punt Block Touchdowns
In Week 6 at Oakton, Westfield blocked and recovered two punts (1, 2) for touchdowns in its 38-13 win. Credit junior Ashton Moss and senior Nick Grinups with recoveries, seniors Ryan Sweet and Dylan Doty with respective blocks.

Field Goal Denials
In Week 7 at Robinson, Sweet blocked the game-winning field goal in regulation and the game-tying extra point in overtime in a 21-20 win over the previously unbeaten Rams.

No. 8 — No. 8
Rigans Breaks Ankles
Hayfield entered its Week 4 game at Yorktown with more points in its first three games than it had scored in any three consecutive games since 2000. Hawk senior Rayshawn Rigans extended his season-opening streak of multiple-touchdown games to four with this mean, 59-yard touchdown run.

Rigans Breaks Hearts
In the season-opener against Marshall, Rigans disappears in a crowd on this punt return before emerging by the sideline, finding an edge and heading 68 yards for a touchdown. Hayfield won, 35-0.

No. 7 — INT TDs
Shak Diesel
West Potomac senior Shakil White earned his squad an early lead at Lake Braddock in Week 9 with this 41-yard, tipped-pass-to-himself interception-return touchdown.

Sir Sirhan
Stuart sophomore Ayman Sirhan read and timed this pitch play, picked off the toss and headed 62 yards for a touchdown to spark a 34-14 win over Marshall.

Money in the Banks
Yorktown capped a 27-point fourth quarter against Wakefield with this interception-return touchdown by senior Erik Cardillo, assisted by senior Charles Banks.

Picks’y Stickford

Lake Braddock senior Thomas Stickford returned four interceptions for touchdowns in the first four weeks of the season, including two at T.C. Williams in Week 4 (1, 2, 3, 4).

No. 6 — Drizzy
Atomic Bomb
Lee senior Idreis Augustus recorded seven touchdowns of 63 yards or longer in the first five weeks of the season, including this 85-yard triple-option touchdown against Annandale that had him visiting both sidelines.

Putting Bulldogs to Sleep
Augustus led the region with 1,089 yards from scrimmage through five games, but at Westfield his short-yardage prowess lifted the Lancers over the Bulldogs, 22-21. He pushed the pile into the end zone for the game-winning two-point conversion in overtime.

GREATEST HITS
Hughes Black and Blues
Nubong Punctuates Rivalry
Great Scott
Hats Off to Centreville
Case of the Mondays
Totow Extinct

No. 5 — Catch the Fever
Denny’s Always Open
In the Sully Bowl, Centreville senior Warren Denny appeared to have cut Chantilly’s lead to three late in the fourth-quarter with this full-extension, one-handed catch. It was called back due to an illegal formation and the score remained unchanged.

Lendenmann Lifts Generals
Washington-Lee senior Karl Lendenmann switched to wide-out in the preseason after splitting time at quarterback last year. Good call.

Nazty Grab
Hayfield receiver Nazrul Islam skies for a one-handed, foot-tapping 16-yard catch from junior Jason Stewart against Washington-Lee in Week 3. The Hawks won, 35-0.

Price is Right
South Lakes senior quarterback Shawn Rana throws a jump ball to junior Sean Price against McLean. Price doesn’t miss those. The Seahawks needed every point to stymie a Highlander comeback, winning, 28-21, in Week 5.

Kiffe Never Iffy
Langley senior tight end Joey Kiffe gets both feet down for an amazing 12-yard touchdown reception from junior quarterback Braden Anderson.

Turner Toe-Tap
Westfield went from underdog to top dog with its road win over Robinson. This five-yard, fourth-down touchdown toss in overtime from senior quarterback Danny Fenyak to senior receiver Gary Turner was the highlight of one the season’s most entertaining games.

Reilly to Hogan for Two
Woodson seniors Connor Reilly and Josh Hogan linked up for a jump-pass touchdown in the third quarter. When the tandem tried it again on a game-winning two-point conversion, Lake Braddock was ready. The Cavs improvised and the result was one of the most debated and exciting moments of the season.

No. 4 — Riled Up
Robinson senior Connor Riley rushed seven times — 7! — for 305 yards and four touchdowns at Centreville in Week 10. The single-game total was nearly one-quarter of his rushing yards for the season and locked up district offensive player of the year (1, 2, 3, 4).

No. 3 — Forgot About Dre
South County had just dropped a final-second, game-winning touchdown pass at the goal line against Chantilly in Week 1. Stallion coach Pete Bendorf called the same play on 2nd-and-10 with :08.9 seconds left, hoping secondary option Andre Simmons would be open on a wheel route against similar coverage. He was right.

No. 2 — Titanic Defense
Israel Back to Homeland
On the same night that senior Damien Benton returned an interception 50 yards for a touchdown at Annandale, T.C. Williams senior Israel Richardson took a pick 69 yards back to the house.

C-H-E-L-O, It’s Alive
Oakton led T.C. Williams, 9-7, with 1:51 left in the game and appeared certain to run out the clock. But, after a fumble on an inside rush, Titan senior linebacker Chelo Abbe grabbed the loose ball and returned 59 yards for the upset-clinching touchdown. T.C beat the defending Division 6 Northern Region champions, 15-9.

No. 1 — Bears, Oh My!
Return on Rams
Robinson had cut Lake Braddock’s led to 10 points with less than eight minutes remaining in the third quarter, but Bruin senior Peres Nubong‘s retaliation proved the fatal blow. He returned the ensuing kickoff 95 yards, sparking 21 unanswered points by the visitors as part of a 38-7 road win, the first for Lake Braddock in the annual series since the regional semifinals in 1999.

Peres Pickle
In the second quarter of the Division 6 Northern Region championship, Woodson began to put together its first drive, trailing by two scores. But Nubong got his hands around a tipped pass and returned it 63 yards to put Lake Braddock ahead by three scores. It needed every point as it held on to win, 27-20, for its first regional title since 1995.


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