Division battles highlight grid contests this weekend

Through the first three weeks of the season, some – not all – of the area’s teams have found themselves in early-season division games. No games are more important than the intra-division, and without exception, every game this week has divisional implications. Without further hesitation, we jump into the five area games this weekend:

Greene (0-0, 2-1) at Unadilla Valley-Edmeston (0-0, 2-1), Friday, 7 p.m.
Greene romped past UV-Edmeston a season ago by a whopping 61-0, and that came was halted early in the fourth quarter. No doubt, tonight’s game on the Storm’s home turf will not resemble last season’s rout.
“They’ve won two of three games, and they had an opportunity to win the other game,” said Greene coach Tim Paske. “They’re definitely a much different team from last year. They’re more motivated, and you see a difference in how they come off the ball and how they get after it.”
The Storm defense has made marked improvements defensively, and is allowing just 97 rushing yards a game. By contrast, the Trojans have the best rushing offense at 306 yards per game. “We have some veteran guys up front, and we think there are things we can take advantage of,” Paske said. “If we stick to the basics, we like our game plan.”
Greene has the area’s second leading rusher, Kurt Shear, who has 423 yards, and quarterback Keegan Cerwinski has 278 yards on the ground. The rest of offense is capable of putting up good numbers, too, Paske said.
UV-Edmeston won last week with special teams and defense. It managed just 100 yards of offense against Spencer-Van Etten, but a punt return for a score by Cody Homann provided the difference.

Oxford (1-1, 2-1) at Deposit-Hancock (0-1, 0-3), Friday, 7 p.m.
Oxford has gone into must-win mode after suffering a heart-breaking one-point overtime loss to Delhi last Friday. “We’re prepared and it comes down to execution and getting over that emotional loss,” said Oxford coach Mike Chrystie.
In the Eagles, Oxford faces a winless team that was battered and blown out by an improving Walton club. Deposit-Hancock is in its first year as a merged team, and is still working out the kinks, Chrystie said. “If anyone can take over a program with rival communities playing together, Terry Raymond (Deposit head coach) can do it,” Chrystie said. “They got thumped a little by Walton, but we know Terrry will have his team prepared to play.”
Oxford eschewed the running game last week in the second half after averaging just two yards per carry against Delhi. Instead, the Blackhawks found a passing game capable of putting up big yards and making even bigger plays. “We want the balance on offense,” Chrystie said. “I don’t think going into a game where you have to throw the ball 30 times, that that’s a good recipe for success. We did grow last week, and we took some positives out of the passing game.”

Susquehanna Valley (0-0, 3-0) at Norwich (0-0, 1-2), Friday, 7 p.m.
Last year, Norwich narrowly escaped with a 6-0 win at Susquehanna Valley. The Sabers are off to a fast start this season winning all three games and averaging over 30 points per game while doing it. Norwich, though, has just four touchdowns through three games, and is averaging less than 150 yards of offense per game.
“We’ve gone back to Norwich football and we’ve focused more on scrimmaging each other and toughening ourselves up,” said Norwich coach John Martinson. “We’ve talking about using our pads on both sides of the ball, staying on blocks, and finishing tackles.”
Laurent Dure paces the SV offense. In 13 carries per game, Dure is averaging 135 yards rushing per game and has seven touchdowns. Ryan Novobilski offsets Dure as a bruising fullback, and is coming off a 100-yard rushing day against Unatego last week. James Chantry operates the offense at quarterback, and has found success running and throwing.
“We saw them last week, and they’re a very solid football team,” Martinson said. “Their backfield is strong and fast, and they can move the ball. We’ve been struggling on offense, and they’re working on all cylinders.”

Bainbridge-Guilford (2-1) at Seton Catholic Central (2-1), Saturday, 2 p.m. at Binghamton Alumni Stadium
B-G has faced three run-based attacks in the first third of the season. Tomorrow, the Bobcats square off against a team that uses a wide-open spread offense. Quarterback Jake Daly is among Section IV’s top passers, and as a runner, is elusive, quick, and a threat to score on any play. “Daly, he makes me nervous,” said B-G coach Tim Mattingly. “He’s quite an athlete. He not only throws it well, but runs the ball. It’s a spread offense that they run now, and Daly is a quick kid. We’ll need to bottle him.”
Mattingly figures the best way to defend Daly is to keep him off the field. The Bobcats’ offensive philosophy is no secret – run the ball. Dakota Vandermark is the top Chenango County rusher with 439 yards, and junior Billy Holden is a powerhouse fullback whose inside runs have set up Vandermark on the outside. “We want to run the ball, establish the line of scrimmage, and go from there,” Mattingly said.

Westmoreland (3-0) at Sherburne-Earlville (1-2), Friday, 7 p.m.
In the few times Sherburne-Earlville has played Westmoreland, the outcomes have not been favorable. Westmoreland remains a perennial Class D championship threat in Section III, and is presently ranked number 16 in the state. “They are ranked that way for a reason,” said S-E coach Mike Jasper. “They have a lot of good depth at all positions. They lost their all-state quarterback (Dan Smith) to a broken arm. I feel bad for him and his family, and that changes what they will do. The way Westmoreland is, they usually have a kid who can step right in and play.”
The Marauders had a touchdown called back last week due to penalty, and an ill-timed penalty led to Frankfort-Schuyler’s second touchdown. “Mistakes, penalties, and turnovers cost us the game last week,” Jasper said. “In a tight game, you can’t do those things against a solid team like Westmoreland.”

–––

On the radio this weekend
Friday: Susquehanna Valley at Norwich, 6:50 p.m., WCHN, 970 AM; Chenango Forks at Unatego, 6:45 p.m., WCDO, 100.9 FM/1490 AM; Windsor at Owego, 6:45 p.m., WEBO, 107.9 FM/1330 AM.
Saturday: Harpursville at Walton, 1:20 p.m., WDLA, 92.1 FM/1270 AM; Sidney at Delhi, WCDO, 100.9 FM/1490 AM and WDHI, 100.3 FM; Oneonta at Chenango Valley, 1:20 p.m., WZOZ, 103.1 FM.

Comments

There are 3 comments for this article

  1. Steven Jobs July 4, 2017 7:25 am

    dived wound factual legitimately delightful goodness fit rat some lopsidedly far when.

    • Jim Calist July 16, 2017 1:29 am

      Slung alongside jeepers hypnotic legitimately some iguana this agreeably triumphant pointedly far

  2. Steven Jobs July 4, 2017 7:25 am

    jeepers unscrupulous anteater attentive noiseless put less greyhound prior stiff ferret unbearably cracked oh.

  3. Steven Jobs May 10, 2018 2:41 am

    So sparing more goose caribou wailed went conveniently burned the the the and that save that adroit gosh and sparing armadillo grew some overtook that magnificently that

  4. Steven Jobs May 10, 2018 2:42 am

    Circuitous gull and messily squirrel on that banally assenting nobly some much rakishly goodness that the darn abject hello left because unaccountably spluttered unlike a aurally since contritely thanks

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.