Norwich in postseason mode, can clinch playoff spot this Friday
Football
Norwich 19, Windsor 8
WINDSOR – The playoffs may not begin for two weeks, but Norwich is already in playoff mode taking the first of two must-win games, Friday night at Windsor.
Norwich (2-1, 3-4) held Windsor to just 84 yards of total offense, and can return to the playoffs with a win at Oneonta this coming Friday. “Our defense really stepped up and executed the game plan,” said Norwich second-year coach John Martinson. “Offensively, we had 13 first downs and were able to mix the pass and run.”
Martinson, a fan of the Miami Dolphins, used a play first executed by Dolphins great Dan Marino, to score a key touchdown at the end of the first half.
Quarterback Seth Thomsen faked a spike-down of the ball to stop the clock, and instead lofted a pass to tight end Josh Whaley for a 20-yard score. The TD upped Norwich’s lead at the half to 13-0.
“We were around the 35 and wanted to stop the clock, and we called a spike to see what Windsor’s defense was doing,” Martinson said. “In between that and the touchdown, I had told Josh to run to the end zone. There was no one in front of him, and Seth made a beautiful pass. It caught them off guard, and it was neat to see the sideline’s reaction.”
Norwich definitely did not have the game on ice, and a Windsor interception in the third quarter brought the Black Knights inside the 10, and Carim Ross’ one-yard touchdown and the two-point conversion closed the game to 13-8.
The Tornado, mixing Tyler Hoffman runs up the middle and Mackay Hotaling’s dashes to the outside, drove for the insurance touchdown in the fourth. Hoffman capped the drive with a three-yard score, his third touchdown in two weeks.
“The way we ran the ball was similar to what we did against Johnson City last week,” Martinson said. “We were able to go inside and outside, and kept the defense guessing.”
Norwich scored early in the second quarter on a Thomsen 12-yard scramble. Thomsen rolled out, cut back inside and put the Tornado up by a score.
Score by quarters
NHS 0 13 0 6–19
Wind. 0 0 8 0–8
Scoring Summary
N: Seth Thomsen 12 run (Nate Ashton kick)
N: Josh Whaley 20 pass from Thomsen (kick failed)
W: Carim Ross 1 run (Dave Whitman run)
N: Tyler Hoffman 3 run (kick failed)
Summary
N W
First downs 13 5
Rushes-yds 48-178, 32-66
Comp-att-int 4-6-1 2-5-1
Passing yds 63 18
Fumbles-lost 3-2 2-1
Punts-avg 1-38 2-29
Penalties-yds 1-5 3-35
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (N) Mackay Hotaling, 11-54, Tyler Hoffman, 14-49, Josh Favaloro, 5-10, S. Thomsen, 8-40, McCullough, 3-14, M. Cleveland, 1-1, P. Taylor, 3-13, Nate Ashton, 3-(-3). (W) Carim Ross, 10-25, Garrett Gaeta, 9-31; David Whitman, 5-19, Marino Hogan, 3-7, Campbell, 5-(-16).
Passing (N) S. Thomsen, 4-6-1, 1 TD, 63 yds; (W) Elliot Campbell, 2-5-1, 18 yds.
Receiving: Josh Whaley, 3-58, Jon Foulds, 1-5. (W) Marino Hogan, 1-11, David Whitman, 1-7.
Delhi 14, Bainbridge-Guilford 12
BAINBRIDGE – Bainbridge-Guilford’s 40-yard field goal attempt in the final 10 seconds was just wide left, and Delhi hung on for a two-point victory Friday night.
The loss eliminated the Bobcats from postseason consideration, while Delhi wrapped up the Section IV, Division VII title with a perfect 5-0 mark. Four of the Bulldogs’ wins have come by five points or less.
“We’ve just had one of those years, and it’s just unfortunate,” said Bobcats coach Tim Mattingly, whose three losses have all come by five points or less. “We’ve had a lot of trouble with quarterback-center exchanges. We’ve been too inconsistent with that, and we’re not sure how to fix it.”
A bobbled exchange on B-G’s two-point conversion attempt in the third quarter factored heavily in the missed attempt to leave the host team two points short. Junior Billy Holden had just scored on a four-yard TD closing the count to 14-12. Holden was able to get the handoff for the conversion, although the execution and timing were way off. Holden came up a half-yard short of tying the contest.
Delhi easily won the total yardage battle, 299-138, but managed just a pair of touchdowns as B-G’s defense came up big several times, one of those occasions stopping a goal-to-go situation inside the five-yard line at the end of the first half. “They were able to move the ball on us, but time after time we made big plays and big stops,” Mattingly said.
B-G’s first touchdown closed Delhi’s lead to 8-6 at the half. B-G field goal kicker Tim Hermann lost his footing and had a 24-yard attempt blocked. Holden recovered the ball behind the line of scrimmage, and scored a touchdown from 12 yards out making it 8-6 at halftime.
Delhi’s Colin Ellis scored on a three-yard run in the third quarter, his second TD of the day, to give Delhi the necessary points. “I was proud of the way our kids battled,” Mattingly said. “Give Delhi credit. They have some talented kids and they’re big and strong. We played well, just not well enough to win.”
B-G was able to drive the ball into position late in the game after a 20-yard pass completion to Holden from Ryan Porter. Mattingly said his team had the position on the field it wanted when Hermann attempted the field goal. A high snap threw off the timing of the play, yet Hermann still had the length on the kick as the ball hooked just left.
Delhi’s defense keyed on B-G’s 1,000-yard rusher, Dakota Vandermark, holding him to a season-low 29 yards on 12 carries. Holden led the Bobcats (4-3) with 76 yards on 19 carries
Score by quarters
Delhi 8 0 6 0–14
B-G 0 6 6 0–12
D: Collin Ellis 6 run (Collin Ellis run)
B: Billy Holden 12 run (kick failed)
D: Collin Ellis 3 run (run failed)
B: Billy Holden 1 run (run failed)
Team Summary
D BG
First downs 16 8
Rushes-yds 48-273 39-93
Passing yds 26 45
Comp-att-int 2-8-0 3-8-0
Punts-avg 2-32 4-37
Fumbles-lost 1-1 5-1
Penalties-yds 5-40 3-22
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (D) Tom Telian 12-99, Jack Fletcher 22-113, Collin Ellis 9-46, Anthony Salerno 5-15. (BG) Billy Holden 19-76, Ryan Porter 5-(-12), Dakota Vandermark 12-29, Danny Gormley 3-0.
Passing: (D) Anthony Salerno 2-for-8, 26 yards. (BG) Ryan Porter 3-for-8, 45 yards.
Receiving: (D) Kevin O'Connell 1-7, Jacob Sackett 1-19. (BG) Danny Gormley 2-25, Billy Holden 1-20.
Harpursville 20, UV-Edmeston 12
NEW BERLIN – Harpursville quarterback Mason Dean ran for two touchdowns and threw for another leading the Hornets to a non-league win at Unadilla Valley-Edmeston Friday night.
Dean answered UV-E’s score in the opening period with a 52-yard dash in the second.
The Storm rebounded and took a 12-8 lead into halftime after a Zak Ruffles six-yard run. Brandon Miles’ five-yard run in the first put the host team on top early. “We started out with the lead, but we knew it was going to be a dogfight for four quarters,” said Storm coach Stan Foulds.
Dean threw a 17-yard TD pass to Eric Storrs in the third quarter, and Dean had an eight-yard TD run in the fourth quarter to give his club an eight-point lead. As a team, the Hornets ran for 282 yards with Dean gaining 96 yards and Tyler Boudreau adding 85.
“We just didn’t execute the way we wanted and had a bad day,” Foulds said. “They got most of their yards running up the middle. We had some breakdowns at crucial times.”
UV-E drove to the Harpursville 35 late in the game, but turned the ball over on a fumble to end the scoring threat.
Brett Gage had his third straight 100-yard rushing day leading UV-E with 129 yards on 18 carries.
Score by quarters
Harp. 0 8 6 6–20
UVE 6 6 0 0–12
Scoring Summary
UVE: Brandon Miles 5 run (run failed)
H: Mason Dean 52 run (Tyler Boudreau run)
UVE: Zak Ruffles 6 run (run failed)
H: Eric Storrs 17 pass from Dean (run failed)
H: Dean 8 run (run failed)
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (UVE) Brett Gage, 18-129; Will Westbrook, 14-64; Zak Ruffles, 8-37; Brandon Miles, 8-5. (H) Team: 39-282
Passing: (UVE) Brandon Miles, 2-3-0, 30 yds; (H) Mason Dean, 2-2-0, 25 yds, TD.
Receiving: (UVE) Ruffles, 2-30. (H) Eric Storrs, 1-17, Russell Anderson, 1-8.
Walton 28, Oxford 7
OXFORD – Oxford’s lone offensive highlight came on a special teams touchdown return in the first quarter as Walton held the Blackhawks to just one first down and 31 yards of total offense Friday on senior night.
The Warriors punched int a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns, a 1-yard plunge by Dylan Hornbeck and a 17-yard dash by Christian Howe, to pull away for the victory.
“When we’ve lost games, it’s becase we haven’t been able to move the ball,” said Oxford coach Mike Chrystie. “The defense did a great job, and it was just a 12-7 game going into the fourth. They only had two big plays, and everything else we made them work for. We didn’t move the chains when we had the ball, and it’s tough to put your defense in that position the entire game.”
After Hornbeck’s one-yard TD run in the opening quarter, Oxford responded quickly when Adam Pierson returned the ensuing kickoff 91 yards for a touchdown. Andrew Golden split the uprights on the extra point putting the Blackhawks in front, 7-6.
Walton’s own special teams touchdown helped it regain the advantage. Nick Shiels’ 36-yard punt return vaulted his club in front, 12-7. Oxford did not threaten the Walton end zone the rest of the game, and the 31 total yards is a season-low. “Some plays were there to be made,” Chrystie said of the offense. “We missed some blocks, but had some holes. We’ve been unable to put the pieces together consistently on offense...I know the coaches are frustrated, too, but the team hasn’t given up. It’s a two-game season, and we want to finish with a winning record.”
Score by quarters
Walt. 6 6 0 16–28
Oxf. 7 0 0 0–7
Scoring Summary
W: Dylan Hornbeck 1 run (run failed)
O: Adam Pierson 91 kickoff return (Andrew Golden kick)
W: Nick Shiels 36 punt return (run failed)
W: Hornbeck 1 run (Hornbeck run)
W: Christian Howe 17 run (Dalton Kaminsky run)
Team Summary
W O
First downs 12 1
Rushes-yds 55-234 19-1
Passing yds 32 30
Comp-att-int 1-6-1 4-13-0
Penalties-yds 6-40 7-60
Fumbles-lost 2-2 1-1
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (W) Howe, 22-112; Hornbeck, 14-36; Shiels, 6-44; Kaminsky, 4-26; Fred Babcock, 2-11; Mike Beers, 2-5; Kasey Bowker, 1-0. (O) Paul Wonka, 10-14; Booker Davis, 2-3; A. Pierson, 1-(-5), John Wonka, 6-(-11).
Passing: (W) Kaminsky, 1-6-1, 32 yds. (O) John Wonka, 4-12-0, 30 yds, B. Davis, 0-1-0, 0 yds.
Receiving: (W) Isaac Wacha, 1-32. (O) Andrew Golden, 1-15, Clayton Audette, 2-11; Adam Pierson, 1-4.
Sherburne-Earlville 7, Mount Markham 0
SHERBURNE – Sherburne-Earlville has done something that no other S-E team has done over the last decade: Finish with a winning record in Section III division play.
The Marauders scored the game’s lone touchdown in the second quarter to win their third straight game on Friday, and wind up division play with a 3-2 mark. “I couldn’t be any happier about the defense, and it has put us in position to win games almost all season,” said S-E coach Mike Jasper. “We were able to drive the ball several times in this game, we just couldn’t finish off drives.”
The Marauders were inside the Mustangs’ 20 seven times, and fumbled four times, while throwing an interception on the only pass they attempted. The lone score game on quarterback Ethan Johnson’s two-yard keeper, and Justin Coye tacked on the extra point.
S-E had 164 yards rushing and held Mt. Markham to six yards rushing on 30 attempts.
Greg DuVall paced the S-E offense with 19 carries for 102 yards. “We won the physical battle up front, and given the conditions, I thought we did a good job running the ball,” Jasper said.
Sherburne-Earlville is slated to host Lafayette this Friday. Jasper said the game may be moved to another site due to poor field conditions. “After Friday night, the field is pretty well chewed up,” he said.
Score by quarters
MM 0 0 0 0–0
S-E 0 7 0 0–7
Scoring Summary
Second quarter
SE: Ethan Johnson 2 run (Justin Coye kick)
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (SE) Greg DuVall, 19-102; Chris Santiago, 5-22; Will Slentz, 3-15; Ethan Johnson, 10-14, TD; Cory Musician, 6-11. (MM) Team total: 30-6.
Passing: (SE) Johnson, 0-1-1 0 yds; (MM) 0-1-0, 0 yds.
Receiving: None.
Norwich 19, Windsor 8
WINDSOR – The playoffs may not begin for two weeks, but Norwich is already in playoff mode taking the first of two must-win games, Friday night at Windsor.
Norwich (2-1, 3-4) held Windsor to just 84 yards of total offense, and can return to the playoffs with a win at Oneonta this coming Friday. “Our defense really stepped up and executed the game plan,” said Norwich second-year coach John Martinson. “Offensively, we had 13 first downs and were able to mix the pass and run.”
Martinson, a fan of the Miami Dolphins, used a play first executed by Dolphins great Dan Marino, to score a key touchdown at the end of the first half.
Quarterback Seth Thomsen faked a spike-down of the ball to stop the clock, and instead lofted a pass to tight end Josh Whaley for a 20-yard score. The TD upped Norwich’s lead at the half to 13-0.
“We were around the 35 and wanted to stop the clock, and we called a spike to see what Windsor’s defense was doing,” Martinson said. “In between that and the touchdown, I had told Josh to run to the end zone. There was no one in front of him, and Seth made a beautiful pass. It caught them off guard, and it was neat to see the sideline’s reaction.”
Norwich definitely did not have the game on ice, and a Windsor interception in the third quarter brought the Black Knights inside the 10, and Carim Ross’ one-yard touchdown and the two-point conversion closed the game to 13-8.
The Tornado, mixing Tyler Hoffman runs up the middle and Mackay Hotaling’s dashes to the outside, drove for the insurance touchdown in the fourth. Hoffman capped the drive with a three-yard score, his third touchdown in two weeks.
“The way we ran the ball was similar to what we did against Johnson City last week,” Martinson said. “We were able to go inside and outside, and kept the defense guessing.”
Norwich scored early in the second quarter on a Thomsen 12-yard scramble. Thomsen rolled out, cut back inside and put the Tornado up by a score.
Score by quarters
NHS 0 13 0 6–19
Wind. 0 0 8 0–8
Scoring Summary
N: Seth Thomsen 12 run (Nate Ashton kick)
N: Josh Whaley 20 pass from Thomsen (kick failed)
W: Carim Ross 1 run (Dave Whitman run)
N: Tyler Hoffman 3 run (kick failed)
Summary
N W
First downs 13 5
Rushes-yds 48-178, 32-66
Comp-att-int 4-6-1 2-5-1
Passing yds 63 18
Fumbles-lost 3-2 2-1
Punts-avg 1-38 2-29
Penalties-yds 1-5 3-35
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (N) Mackay Hotaling, 11-54, Tyler Hoffman, 14-49, Josh Favaloro, 5-10, S. Thomsen, 8-40, McCullough, 3-14, M. Cleveland, 1-1, P. Taylor, 3-13, Nate Ashton, 3-(-3). (W) Carim Ross, 10-25, Garrett Gaeta, 9-31; David Whitman, 5-19, Marino Hogan, 3-7, Campbell, 5-(-16).
Passing (N) S. Thomsen, 4-6-1, 1 TD, 63 yds; (W) Elliot Campbell, 2-5-1, 18 yds.
Receiving: Josh Whaley, 3-58, Jon Foulds, 1-5. (W) Marino Hogan, 1-11, David Whitman, 1-7.
Delhi 14, Bainbridge-Guilford 12
BAINBRIDGE – Bainbridge-Guilford’s 40-yard field goal attempt in the final 10 seconds was just wide left, and Delhi hung on for a two-point victory Friday night.
The loss eliminated the Bobcats from postseason consideration, while Delhi wrapped up the Section IV, Division VII title with a perfect 5-0 mark. Four of the Bulldogs’ wins have come by five points or less.
“We’ve just had one of those years, and it’s just unfortunate,” said Bobcats coach Tim Mattingly, whose three losses have all come by five points or less. “We’ve had a lot of trouble with quarterback-center exchanges. We’ve been too inconsistent with that, and we’re not sure how to fix it.”
A bobbled exchange on B-G’s two-point conversion attempt in the third quarter factored heavily in the missed attempt to leave the host team two points short. Junior Billy Holden had just scored on a four-yard TD closing the count to 14-12. Holden was able to get the handoff for the conversion, although the execution and timing were way off. Holden came up a half-yard short of tying the contest.
Delhi easily won the total yardage battle, 299-138, but managed just a pair of touchdowns as B-G’s defense came up big several times, one of those occasions stopping a goal-to-go situation inside the five-yard line at the end of the first half. “They were able to move the ball on us, but time after time we made big plays and big stops,” Mattingly said.
B-G’s first touchdown closed Delhi’s lead to 8-6 at the half. B-G field goal kicker Tim Hermann lost his footing and had a 24-yard attempt blocked. Holden recovered the ball behind the line of scrimmage, and scored a touchdown from 12 yards out making it 8-6 at halftime.
Delhi’s Colin Ellis scored on a three-yard run in the third quarter, his second TD of the day, to give Delhi the necessary points. “I was proud of the way our kids battled,” Mattingly said. “Give Delhi credit. They have some talented kids and they’re big and strong. We played well, just not well enough to win.”
B-G was able to drive the ball into position late in the game after a 20-yard pass completion to Holden from Ryan Porter. Mattingly said his team had the position on the field it wanted when Hermann attempted the field goal. A high snap threw off the timing of the play, yet Hermann still had the length on the kick as the ball hooked just left.
Delhi’s defense keyed on B-G’s 1,000-yard rusher, Dakota Vandermark, holding him to a season-low 29 yards on 12 carries. Holden led the Bobcats (4-3) with 76 yards on 19 carries
Score by quarters
Delhi 8 0 6 0–14
B-G 0 6 6 0–12
D: Collin Ellis 6 run (Collin Ellis run)
B: Billy Holden 12 run (kick failed)
D: Collin Ellis 3 run (run failed)
B: Billy Holden 1 run (run failed)
Team Summary
D BG
First downs 16 8
Rushes-yds 48-273 39-93
Passing yds 26 45
Comp-att-int 2-8-0 3-8-0
Punts-avg 2-32 4-37
Fumbles-lost 1-1 5-1
Penalties-yds 5-40 3-22
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (D) Tom Telian 12-99, Jack Fletcher 22-113, Collin Ellis 9-46, Anthony Salerno 5-15. (BG) Billy Holden 19-76, Ryan Porter 5-(-12), Dakota Vandermark 12-29, Danny Gormley 3-0.
Passing: (D) Anthony Salerno 2-for-8, 26 yards. (BG) Ryan Porter 3-for-8, 45 yards.
Receiving: (D) Kevin O'Connell 1-7, Jacob Sackett 1-19. (BG) Danny Gormley 2-25, Billy Holden 1-20.
Harpursville 20, UV-Edmeston 12
NEW BERLIN – Harpursville quarterback Mason Dean ran for two touchdowns and threw for another leading the Hornets to a non-league win at Unadilla Valley-Edmeston Friday night.
Dean answered UV-E’s score in the opening period with a 52-yard dash in the second.
The Storm rebounded and took a 12-8 lead into halftime after a Zak Ruffles six-yard run. Brandon Miles’ five-yard run in the first put the host team on top early. “We started out with the lead, but we knew it was going to be a dogfight for four quarters,” said Storm coach Stan Foulds.
Dean threw a 17-yard TD pass to Eric Storrs in the third quarter, and Dean had an eight-yard TD run in the fourth quarter to give his club an eight-point lead. As a team, the Hornets ran for 282 yards with Dean gaining 96 yards and Tyler Boudreau adding 85.
“We just didn’t execute the way we wanted and had a bad day,” Foulds said. “They got most of their yards running up the middle. We had some breakdowns at crucial times.”
UV-E drove to the Harpursville 35 late in the game, but turned the ball over on a fumble to end the scoring threat.
Brett Gage had his third straight 100-yard rushing day leading UV-E with 129 yards on 18 carries.
Score by quarters
Harp. 0 8 6 6–20
UVE 6 6 0 0–12
Scoring Summary
UVE: Brandon Miles 5 run (run failed)
H: Mason Dean 52 run (Tyler Boudreau run)
UVE: Zak Ruffles 6 run (run failed)
H: Eric Storrs 17 pass from Dean (run failed)
H: Dean 8 run (run failed)
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (UVE) Brett Gage, 18-129; Will Westbrook, 14-64; Zak Ruffles, 8-37; Brandon Miles, 8-5. (H) Team: 39-282
Passing: (UVE) Brandon Miles, 2-3-0, 30 yds; (H) Mason Dean, 2-2-0, 25 yds, TD.
Receiving: (UVE) Ruffles, 2-30. (H) Eric Storrs, 1-17, Russell Anderson, 1-8.
Walton 28, Oxford 7
OXFORD – Oxford’s lone offensive highlight came on a special teams touchdown return in the first quarter as Walton held the Blackhawks to just one first down and 31 yards of total offense Friday on senior night.
The Warriors punched int a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns, a 1-yard plunge by Dylan Hornbeck and a 17-yard dash by Christian Howe, to pull away for the victory.
“When we’ve lost games, it’s becase we haven’t been able to move the ball,” said Oxford coach Mike Chrystie. “The defense did a great job, and it was just a 12-7 game going into the fourth. They only had two big plays, and everything else we made them work for. We didn’t move the chains when we had the ball, and it’s tough to put your defense in that position the entire game.”
After Hornbeck’s one-yard TD run in the opening quarter, Oxford responded quickly when Adam Pierson returned the ensuing kickoff 91 yards for a touchdown. Andrew Golden split the uprights on the extra point putting the Blackhawks in front, 7-6.
Walton’s own special teams touchdown helped it regain the advantage. Nick Shiels’ 36-yard punt return vaulted his club in front, 12-7. Oxford did not threaten the Walton end zone the rest of the game, and the 31 total yards is a season-low. “Some plays were there to be made,” Chrystie said of the offense. “We missed some blocks, but had some holes. We’ve been unable to put the pieces together consistently on offense...I know the coaches are frustrated, too, but the team hasn’t given up. It’s a two-game season, and we want to finish with a winning record.”
Score by quarters
Walt. 6 6 0 16–28
Oxf. 7 0 0 0–7
Scoring Summary
W: Dylan Hornbeck 1 run (run failed)
O: Adam Pierson 91 kickoff return (Andrew Golden kick)
W: Nick Shiels 36 punt return (run failed)
W: Hornbeck 1 run (Hornbeck run)
W: Christian Howe 17 run (Dalton Kaminsky run)
Team Summary
W O
First downs 12 1
Rushes-yds 55-234 19-1
Passing yds 32 30
Comp-att-int 1-6-1 4-13-0
Penalties-yds 6-40 7-60
Fumbles-lost 2-2 1-1
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (W) Howe, 22-112; Hornbeck, 14-36; Shiels, 6-44; Kaminsky, 4-26; Fred Babcock, 2-11; Mike Beers, 2-5; Kasey Bowker, 1-0. (O) Paul Wonka, 10-14; Booker Davis, 2-3; A. Pierson, 1-(-5), John Wonka, 6-(-11).
Passing: (W) Kaminsky, 1-6-1, 32 yds. (O) John Wonka, 4-12-0, 30 yds, B. Davis, 0-1-0, 0 yds.
Receiving: (W) Isaac Wacha, 1-32. (O) Andrew Golden, 1-15, Clayton Audette, 2-11; Adam Pierson, 1-4.
Sherburne-Earlville 7, Mount Markham 0
SHERBURNE – Sherburne-Earlville has done something that no other S-E team has done over the last decade: Finish with a winning record in Section III division play.
The Marauders scored the game’s lone touchdown in the second quarter to win their third straight game on Friday, and wind up division play with a 3-2 mark. “I couldn’t be any happier about the defense, and it has put us in position to win games almost all season,” said S-E coach Mike Jasper. “We were able to drive the ball several times in this game, we just couldn’t finish off drives.”
The Marauders were inside the Mustangs’ 20 seven times, and fumbled four times, while throwing an interception on the only pass they attempted. The lone score game on quarterback Ethan Johnson’s two-yard keeper, and Justin Coye tacked on the extra point.
S-E had 164 yards rushing and held Mt. Markham to six yards rushing on 30 attempts.
Greg DuVall paced the S-E offense with 19 carries for 102 yards. “We won the physical battle up front, and given the conditions, I thought we did a good job running the ball,” Jasper said.
Sherburne-Earlville is slated to host Lafayette this Friday. Jasper said the game may be moved to another site due to poor field conditions. “After Friday night, the field is pretty well chewed up,” he said.
Score by quarters
MM 0 0 0 0–0
S-E 0 7 0 0–7
Scoring Summary
Second quarter
SE: Ethan Johnson 2 run (Justin Coye kick)
Individual Statistics
Rushing: (SE) Greg DuVall, 19-102; Chris Santiago, 5-22; Will Slentz, 3-15; Ethan Johnson, 10-14, TD; Cory Musician, 6-11. (MM) Team total: 30-6.
Passing: (SE) Johnson, 0-1-1 0 yds; (MM) 0-1-0, 0 yds.
Receiving: None.
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