Indiana State | Archive | November, 2005

3A FINAL: NorthWood wins first title on sixth try, hands Chatard its first loss in eight championship games, 7-0

By Brandon Jones

Staff Writer

The outcome — a complete reversal of the 49-0 whuppin’ Chatard laid on NorthWood just two years ago in this game — presents a series of firsts:

* The first championship game loss for Chatard (12-3), now 7-1 in the finals

* The first championship game win for NorthWood, now 1-5 in the finals

* The first title team with six losses for NorthWood

NorthWood freshman quarterback Skyler Titus hit junior wide receiver Brant Ehret on a 10-yard TD pass with just 35 seconds left in the first half for the game’s only points. The Panther defense came up big not only on the final play, but also on third downs throughout the game as NorthWood held the Trojans to a feeble 1-of-10 success rate.

Holding No. 3-ranked Chatardâ??s offense to only 166 total yards, the unranked Panthers came to play on the defensive side of the ball. Both teams entered the contest wanting control by running the football, but it would be the defenses that would be the gameâ??s deciding factor.

Both offenses started the opening quarter with a fairly conservative game plan. Chatard received the opening kickoff, but coach Vince Lorenzanoâ??s offense could get nothing going as three straight running plays netted only eight yards, and the Trojans were forced to punt. NorthWoodâ??s offense followed suit on its opening drive as the Panthers gained only seven yards, and they, too, were forced to punt.

The theme of the afternoonâ??s first game was established.

Chatardâ??s next drive began on its own 24-yard line, but runs by junior Joe Holland and sophomore Tyler Kleinschmidt could not move the chains. The Trojans gave the ball back to NorthWood midway through the first quarter with the contest still scoreless.

The Panthers chose to mix it up on their next possession as they threw the gameâ??s first pass. The attempt, however, was unsuccessful, and only 57 seconds after gaining control of the football, NorthWood was forced to punt.

Chatard next managed to pick up the afternoonâ??s first moving of the chains, but penalties stalled the drive with just over three minutes remaining in the first period. The Trojans, once again, would be forced to surrender the football.

NorthWoodâ??s next drive showed some promise as the Panthers maneuvered their way down the field, highlighted by a 38-yard connection between Titus and senior running back Kodi Diemer. After faltering on third down, however, it appeared the Panthers would have to settle for a field goal, and senior Ryan Burkhart connected from 37 yards out.

But the Panthers were forced to try again after an illegal-procedure penalty, and they would not be as lucky the next time around. Chatard junior Nik Beery got a hand on the 42-yard attempt, and it fell to the turf. The game remained tied at zero with just over seven minutes remaining in the first half.

Chatard, as it had all season long, turned to its horse in the backfield. Holland touched the football five times on the ensuing drive, yet could manage only 19 yards on those carries. The Trojans still picked up two first downs on the drive, one by Holland and the other on a 24-yard sweep play by Kleinschmidt. But Kleinschmidtâ??s next carry would be the Trojansâ?? last of this drive as he was dropped for a six-yard loss, and Chatard punted from its own 28.

The kick gave NorthWood its best field position of the afternoon, and a nine-play, 47-yard drive put the Panthers in position once again to score the gameâ??s first points with less then a minute before the half. They did when Titus (7 for 10 for 98 yards) connected with Ehret (four receptions, 44 yards) on the 10-yard touchdown pass on the left side of the end zone. Burkhartâ??s point after was good, and NorthWood — everyoneâ??s choice as the underdog in this contest â??? had taken a 7-0 lead over Chatard.

â??He (Titus) has played in a few wars playing in our conference (the tough eight-team Northern Lakes, where NorthWood amazingly finished tied for sixth at 2-5), and obviously played some very good football teams throughout the tournament,â? Dodson said. â??Heâ??s a great kid with a lot of composure, and heâ??s grown up quite a bit.

â??I tried to relate to him that itâ??s no different than playing in the backyard. Iâ??m not sure if he really bought it or not.â?

Very rarely is seven points enough to win a football game, but this time it would be.

â??We had just enough offense, but we brought a lot of defense and that was the difference,â? said NorthWood coach Rich Dodson. â??â??Anytime you can pitch the ball to Joe Holland there is always the threat of a big play.â?

No foolinâ??. Chatardâ??s 6â??2â?, 190-pounder entered the game averaging 155 yards a contest and had scored 30 touchdowns through 14 games. His numbers against the NorthWood D: 22 carries for 89 yards and zero TDs. Kleinschmidt fared little better, toting the rock seven times for 38 yards.

In fact, the Trojans as a team came in averaging 252 yards per game on the ground. They left with only 122, a serious testament to the NorthWood defense.

â??Defensively they were faster than we were on offense — thatâ??s the bottom line,â? said Lorenzano. â??Overall as a team, they were faster than we were. They were reading and running on defense, and that disrupted our offense.â?

To the second half! NorthWood received the opening kickoff and used a heavy dose of smashmouth football. The Panthers ran the ball on their first seven plays of the quarter and looked as if they were poised to make the contest a two-possession game. On the driveâ??s eighth play, however, Titus was sacked for a nine-yard loss, and the next play was an incomplete pass. The Panthers punted the ball back to Chatard with 5:48 remaining in the third quarter.

But the Trojans could not capitalize. NorthWood had figured out the offensive formations used by Chatard and, though they would add another first down to their total, the Trojans were forced to give the ball back.

NorthWoodâ??s next drive was a statement of sorts. The Panthers methodically moved the ball down the field to run out the third quarter of play. A 37-yard run by sophomore Kent Biller (NorthWoodâ??s leading rusher with 48 yards on seven carries) was the key play as it got the Panthers into Chatard territory. With a chance to put the game away with another score, though, the Panthers got sloppy as the fourth quarter began.

Biller could not handle a pitch from Titus, and the ball fell to the turf. Chatard junior defensive back Ben Buhler pounced on the pigskin at the 24-yard line, and it appeared the Trojans were in business. But three consecutive runs by Holland netted the Trojans only six yards, and they gave it right back to NorthWood.

The Chatard defense stiffened as well, and the Trojans gained the ball right back after a Panther three-and-out. NorthWood only chewed 1:41 off the clock, and the game was still within reach for Chatard.

With 7:41 to go, Chatard changed its game plan and decided it was time to go to the air. Senior quarterback Matt Lubbers was unsuccessful on two consecutive attempts, though, and with 6:37 to go, senior punter Todd Leone (seven punts for a 36-yard average on the day) used his foot once again to give possession back to the Panthers.

NorthWood once again failed to run much time off the clock. The Panthers gained only four yards on their drive and with 4:07 to go, Chatard had one more chance to find paydirt. And on the gameâ??s final drive, Chatard finally found some rhythm.

The Trojans took over at their own 15, knowing exactly what was ahead of them. Like in college football, the clock stops every time the chains are moved, so Chatard did not abandon the ground game quite yet — runs by Holland and Kleinschmidt got the ball to midfield with under a minute to go. Sophomore QB Matt Doyle, the teamâ??s passing specialist, got the nod over Lubbers on this drive.

â??We might have needed to throw the ball earlier to open things up,â? said Lorenzano, whose quarterbacks combined to go 6 for 12 for just 34 yards. â??We normally run the football, and they stopped us from doing that.â?

A series of short passes advanced the ball to the NorthWood 27 with 27 seconds remaining. But a sack of Doyle did not help the Trojan cause, and the clock ran down to :06 with the ball resting at the 32-yard line before the Trojans called timeout to diagram one final play.

It was a jump-ball pass to the left corner of the end zone, intended for tight end Kyle Dietrick, but the sophomore could not haul it in over two Panther defenders. The clock read :00, and the gameâ??s decision was final.

â??Iâ??ve been involved in a lot of these first-time ball games,â? Lorenzano said. â??Congratulations to coach Dodson — they showed why they made a great run in the tournament.â?

Despite the loss, it should be noted that Chatard did a solid job of containing the NorthWood offense. Leading the way for the Trojans were three players: sophomore defensive linemen John Drury (12 tackles, including nine solos), sophomore linebacker Mike Dum (10 and eight), and Buhler (eight and five).

Leading a balanced NorthWood defensive attack were junior linebacker Jed Beer and junior defensive end Kent Schaffer, who each recorded seven tackles with five solos.

NorthWood Panthers, yourâ?? worst-everâ?? state champion!

At 9-6, Northwood gladly accepts the moniker of â??state champion with the worst-ever record.â? Coach Ott Hurrle’s Indianapolis Scecina team, a 28-27 victor over River Forest in the 1990 Class 2A final, previously held that honor after finishing its run at 9-5.

â??We tried to convince the kids all year long that we were not a terrible team, we just werenâ??t playing the way I thought we could,â? said Dodson, whose Panthers finished as state runner-up in 1980 (Class 2A), â??86, â??93, â??98, and 2003. â??We started believing in ourselves a little bit better, changed our attitude, and we were able to get here.

â??(This is) just a great group of kids. We really donâ??t have any true Division I kids, but they sure played like a bunch of Division I kids today.â?

Chatardâ??s Ball wins Mental Attitude Award

Kevin Ball of Indianapolis Chatard was selected as the winner of the Phil N. Eskew Mental Attitude Award by members of the IHSAA Executive Committee. The Trojansâ?? placekicker and a backup wide receiver as well, Ball also is a three-year member of the schoolâ??s baseball team as a second baseman.

Academically, he ranks fourth in his class of 188 students. He has been a student council representative all four years, including class president as a freshman, and has done volunteer work with St. Lukeâ??s Youth Ministry, St. Augustineâ??s Home for the Aged, and youth baseball.

The son of Dr. Michael and Mary Ellen Ball of Indianapolis plans to study Pre-Med in college, where he is deciding between Yale, Princeton, Stanford, and Notre Dame.

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4A FINAL: Lowell shocks Roncalli with 14-point fourth quarter, ends Rebels 4-peat bid, 28-27

By Brandon Jones

Staff Writer

The contest got off to a nice start for the sixth-ranked Rebels with excellent field position after senior Brandon Axum returned the opening kickoff to the Lowell 41-yard line. Championship teams cash in on an opportunity like this, and the Rebels did not disappoint. Roncalli capped off a nine-play drive with a four-yard plunge by senior running back Chris Merkel (22 carries, 109 yards) to draw first blood, and following senior Chad Hertâ??s extra-point kick it was Roncalli 7, Lowell 0 nearly halfway through the first quarter.

The Red Devils, appearing in their first-ever state championship in any sport, marched down the field as if they had been here many times before. A grueling 15-play drive ended in disappointment, however, as a 27-yard field goal was nullified by a false start, and the Red Devils were unsuccessful on the subsequent 33-yard attempt.

The Rebels took over possession of the ball but could not add to their lead as the Lowell defense stepped up to the challenge. (Hint: It would happen again twice much later in the contest when it mattered most.) The Rebels did manage to pick up two first downs, giving themselves some breathing room to punt.

Lowellâ??s succeeding drive started poorly but ended with the desired result. After another false-start penalty on first down, the Devils faced a 1st-and-15. A successful rushing attempt to the left side by 5â??8â? senior Scott Gray (19 carries, 153 yards, three touchdowns) netted seven yards to cut the yardage in half, but it would be Grayâ??s next carry that allowed the Red Devils to position themselves for the tying score.

Gray took a pitch left from Ritter and turned the corner. Fifty-six yards later, the Red Devils were banging on the door at the Roncalli 10. On third down, Gray got the big payoff by way of an eight-yard run over the Rebels defense, tying the score at 7 after sophomore David Langâ??s extra point.

The Rebels would answer, however — and in a BIG way. Just two plays into the next possession, junior quarterback Paul Corsaro (7 of 10 for 120 yards with two touchdowns and one interception) found senior tight end Andy Barkocy after a beautiful play-action fake. Barkocy, who had gotten behind the entire Red Devil defense, hauled in the pass for a 64-yard score, and Hertâ??s PAT put the Rebels back in front, 14-7, just 52 seconds later.

Things went from bad to worse for the underdog Lowell squad on its next possession. Needing a score to gain back some of the gameâ??s momentum, the Red Devils did just the opposite. Gray, the hero on the previous drive, fumbled on second down, and Roncalli senior defensive end Brandon Roberts fell on the ball. The Rebels were in great position again as they took possession at the Lowell 22.

Four plays later, the Rebels would extend their lead to two touchdowns. After three consecutive runs by Merkel to the Red Devilsâ?? 11, Corsaro turned to the air once more for the score. This time he found senior running back Bill Perry from 11 yards out and, following the PAT, the Rebels were now in front by a comfortable 14 point margin with just 2:30 to go in the first half.

Both teams would trade possessions on the remaining series of the first half, with Lowell losing the ball on downs at the Roncalli 30 after wasting a chance to cut the deficit.

The three-time defending state champs thus went into the locker room riding high with a 21-7 advantage.

â??We werenâ??t playing Red Devil football in the first half — we practically gave them their 21 first-half points,â? said Kennedy. â??We were making silly mistakes that we knew would get us beat in this game.

â??Our adjustments (in the second half) were in our hearts and in our brains. We told them at halftime they had 24 minutes for the rest of their life.â?

Coming out of the locker room knowing they needed a score and fast, the Red Devils responded in the biggest of ways. A 15-play, 70-yard drive that ate almost seven minutes off the clock was finalized with a one-yard dive by Gray. The extra point was successful, and Lowell had cut the lead in half at 21-14.

Roncalli, however, answered the bell on its next possession. The Rebels took possession on their own 30 and marched 70 yards in just nine plays. The drive ended with senior running back Brandon Axum getting the ball on a reverse play and tight-roping his way down the south sideline for a 24-yard touchdown.

It may have been the next play, though, that decided the outcome of the game. The extra-point attempt by Hert was blocked by Ritter, who doubles as a linebacker for the Red Devils. Yet Roncalli still held what seemed to be a safe lead at 27-14 with 1:25 remaining in the third period.

First-timer Lowell showed no fear in trailing by 13 after three quarters. The Red Devils took advantage of a tired Roncalli defense to cut into the lead once again. This time, it was via an air attack. After the ninth play of the drive got the ball to the Roncalli 20, Ritter (7 for 13 for 67 yards) passed to senior tailback Jeff Clemens, and Clemens squeezed the ball inside the pylon. Following the extra point, the lead was now down to a precarious six points with 9:12 to go.

The Rebels gave Lowell a gift on their next touch of the ball. Facing a 3rd-and-10 at the Roncalli 30, Corsaro rolled out to his right and was looking for a receiver to move the chains. Instead, he found Lowell junior linebacker Josh Kuiper, who took the ball 18 yards in the other direction to the Rebel 28.

Despite an increasingly crazy RCA Dome crowd, Lowell remained calm and cool in reaching the end zone in just five plays. The Red Devils took their first lead of the evening on a four-yard run by Gray, and the critical point-after by Lang put Lowell up, 28-27, with just 5:51 remaining.

The Rebels had been in this position before and climbed out of it, and it certainly appeared that had once again when Axum took the kickoff up the right sideline for what appeared to be the go-ahead score. But the Rebels were flagged for a clipping violation, sending them back deep under the shadows of their own goalpost.

They knew they needed this drive to claim another state championship, and so did the maniacal fans on both sides of the dome.

The drive looked promising as the Rebels surrounded a 14-yard sack of Corsaro with seven running plays that totaled 39 yards in moving the ball to the Roncalli 45, including a critical two-yard run by Merkel on 4th-and-1. But another Merkel two-yard run, a five-yard pass, and an incompletion set up 4th-and-3 for the Rebels, and this time their luck finally evaporated with 75 seconds remaining when Corsaro was sacked by Lowell senior linebacker Chris Lampa.

Lowell took a knee three times, and the improbable had occurred. Public School â??Davidâ? had slain Catholic powerhouse â??Goliath,â? and the unranked Lowell Red Devils claimed the schoolâ??s first-ever state championship in any sport.

â??Itâ??s not like Roncalli football to give up leads,â? said a weary Scifres, pointing out that all five of Roncalliâ??s postseason games leading up to this one went right down to the wire. â??They blocked a PAT, we throw an interception, and we have a long touchdown return called back.

â??Some of that is self-imposed and obviously a lot of that has to do with their kids playing their hearts out and making plays. Lowell has a great team and they did a great job.â?

Kennedy said the little things mattered late in the game just as much as the huge plays his defense came up with.

â??Everybody will talk about the interception, the blocked extra point, or the fourth-down stop,â? Kennedy said. â??A lot of plays were made in the second half, and every one contributed to our win.â?

Among those contributing heavily on the defensive side of the ball for the Red Devils were defensive back Clemens (12 tackles, including 10 solos) and Kuiper (nine tackles with seven solos). Lowell did a solid job in holding Merkel, Roncalliâ??s leading rusher at 134 yards per game, to 25 yards less than his average and just one score.

The Rebels, meanwhile, struggled a bit more with Gray, who entered the fray averaging 156 yards a game with 26 touchdowns. Leading the Roncalli defense were linebacker Perry (12 tackles, seven of which were solo), senior defensive lineman Steve Wilson (11, four), and senior defensive back Jordan Agresta (eight, seven).

Two Class 4A state championship records set

The 64-yard touchdown pass from Corsaro to Barkocy in the second quarter established two Class 4A championship game records: longest touchdown pass and longest touchdown reception.

The old marks were 62 yards, set by Franklin Central thrower Brian Beckman and receiver Brian Burton in the Flashesâ?? 34-14 win over Hobart in 1990.

Roncalliâ??s Banich receives Mental Attitude Award

Members of the IHSAA Executive Committee selected Roncalli linebacker Nick Banich as the winner of the Phil N. Eskew Mental Attitude Award for Class 4A. A football co-captain and two-year starter, Banich also has participated in basketball and has been a three-year member of the track team, having qualified for the state meet last spring.

The son of Joseph and Jeannie Banich of New Palestine, Banich maintains a 4.1 GPA while enrolled in Honors and Advanced Placement courses at the school. He has been heavily involved in many school activities, including German Club, Student Council, and the National Honor Society. He also was a part of the IHSAA Student Leadership Conference and won the Kiwanis Club Service Leadership Award.

Banich, who is undecided on his college plans at this juncture, said his teammates let one another down in not getting the win. But he understood the loss came to a quality opponent.

â??We knew they were tough,â? said Banich. â??We said in the locker room at halftime there are 20-some seniors on that team, and they are not going to give up in the second half.â?

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HoosierAuthority.com's broadcast of football state finals a big success

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Mike: The moral of NorthWood, Lowell football championships? Just shut up and play

By Mike McGraw

Executive Director

For Roncalli, it would make an unprecedented four in a row.

Few people doubted that the Catholic schools would take home the titles. In fact, most people were sure that Chatard would not even have to break much of a sweat to erase NorthWood. After all, the Panthers had ended the regular season at 3-6 before going on their improbable tournament run. Lowell might prove a slightly sterner test for Roncalli, but surely nothing the Rebels couldnâ??t handle.

As a result, the grumbling had already started. You could hear it in the stands at the dome, and it had bubbled just under the surface of media coverage all week. The message boards on our site and others were ablaze with conversation about what should be done to foil the Catholic school oligarchy.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the trophy presentation — somebody forgot to tell NorthWood and Lowell they were supposed to play the role of the lovable loser. Instead, the players and coaching staffs of these two programs tightened their chin straps before going out and dumping the supposedly overpowering parochial juggernauts on their butts.

So much for whining season.

The victories of these Northern Indiana public two schools should put to rest once and for all the clamoring for some contrived system to make it more difficult for the private schools. That is a VERY good thing. It is time that some people in the public school community learned that the way to compete is to get better, not to penalize someone else because they do.

NorthWood and Lowell showed that it is possible to not only compete with the parochial powers, but to beat them. We offer our congratulations to these teams, but we warn you — you wonâ??t be on the Christmas card list of some of your public school brethren.

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No. 2 North Central girls down 11th-ranked Columbus North, 111-75

Staff Report

INDIANAPOLIS â??? The No. 2-ranked North Central (Indianapolis) Panthers improved to 2-0 on the young season Nov. 26 with a 111-75 girls swimming victory over 11th-ranked Columbus North. Led by three freshmen at the North Central Natatorium, the Panthers won five individual events and two of the three relays.

Lauren Massey took first in the 100- and 200-yard freestyle events and was a part of the 200 and 400 free relay wins, while Jessica Breymier earned the top spot in the 100 breaststroke. Springboard diver Ellis Walters, also a freshman, won in convincing fashion on the boards.

The Panthersâ?? 400 free relay team of Kaitlin Maddox, Brittany Kent, Clara VanAllen, and Massey swam to a very impressive 3:37.51.

North Central will next be in action Nov. 29 when it hosts Warren Central.

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Top-ranked North Central boys thrash No. 19 Columbus North, 153-25

Staff Report

INDIANAPOLIS â??? Top-ranked and defending boys swimming state champion North Central (Indianapolis) started off the 2005-06 season with a statement Nov. 26, posting a 153-25 victory over visiting No. 19 Columbus North.

The Panthers won every single event in the competition on their way to breaking two school records.

In fact, “school record!” was being shouted all around the deck as the 200-yard medley relay team of Michael Christy, Riley Boulden, Drew Sease, and Peter Jameson posted the schoolâ??s all-time best performance in their first competitive meet of the season with a mark of 1:35.36.

â??We wanted to start the season with a really good relay,â? said Jameson, who continued the record-breaking parade by posting North Central’s all-time best 100 butterfly time in 50.42 seconds (Greg Drake, 1987). â??Our goal was to break the school record, and we just went after it and we did it.

â??It really set up the stage for the rest of the meet and, hopefully, for the rest of the season.â?

Other outstanding performances came from Ted Minturn, who won the distance events (200 and 500 freestyle), and Chris Hall, who took the top spot in diving.

The Panthers will continue competition Nov. 29 when they host Warren Central.

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Huge second quarter pushes Madison-Grant to 32-point win over Oak Hill

By Chris May

Contributing Writer

FAIRMOUNT — Behind the double-figure scoring of four players Nov. 26, coach Chris Smedleyâ??s Madison-Grant Argylls notched a sixth straight win over local rival Oak Hill with an easy 75-43 triumph at home.

After playing to a 15-15 tie at the end of the first quarter, the Argyll offense turned it up a gear while stalling the Golden Eagles.

Madison-Grant started the period on a 12-2 run with field goals from five different players, then completed the half with another run, this one an 13-2 spurt over the final 3:23. In the quarter overall, the hosts outscored Oak Hill, 25-7, allowing only two field goals.

Senior Kyle Pulley, who had only two free points in the first quarter, stepped up his production in the second by scoring nine points, seven of them in the final 3:23. That output tied fellow senior Jake Stroup for the M-G halftime scoring lead with 11 points.

From the 40-22 halftime score, the Argyllsâ?? lead held up for the rest of the night. Oak Hill would cut it to a 16-point game with 6:18 left in the third, but that was the closest it would get.

Smedleyâ??s team put up 20 more points in the third quarter while limiting the Golden Eagles to 12, then held Oak Hill to just nine in the final quarter while tacking on another 15.

For the game, the 6-foot Stroup had 16 points, while Pulley finished with 15. Starter Tyler Sizelove scored 12 and junior Shawn Yeagy finished with 11 points off the bench, eight of those coming after halftime.

Oak Hill, under its third head coach in as many years, had 10 players score, but none of those reached double figures. In fact, the Golden Eagles managed only 15 field goals for the game, a number the hosts had surpassed by halftime. Senior Tyler Deaton led the way with nine points, with all coming on long-distance shots and all in the first quarter, while 6â??2â? sophomore Bryant Blair added seven.

Oak Hill, which finished with a school-worst 1-20 record last year, starts this one with a 0-1 mark under coach Kevin Renbarger. Madison-Grant, meanwhile, moves to 2-0 and onto a Dec. 3 date with defending Class A state champion Lapel.

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No. 4 Lafayette Central Catholic rallies to down Lebanon, 66-49, in Barrett's coaching debut

By Jeff Luzadder

Contributing Writer

LAFAYETTE â??? Former Purdue menâ??s basketball player Dave Barrett made his Indiana high school head coaching debut at alma mater Lafayette Central Catholic a successful one Nov. 26, rallying the host Knights in the second half of a 66-49 win over Lebanon.

With Class A fourth-ranked Central Catholic trailing the Tigers by eight with 3:58 to go in the third quarter, it looked like Barrettâ??s first coaching win might have to wait until Game 2. But the Knights came back to tie the game heading into the fourth quarter, and LCC pulled away as Lebanon missed its first 12 shots of the period, including seven 3-point attempts.

Lebanon coach Tom Johnson, also in his first game as the Tiger general, credited Central Catholic’s second-half pressure defense in the half court, which made it difficult for his team to get any good looks at the basket, as the difference in the game. Central Catholic also won the battle of the boards, outrebounding Lebanon by a 39 to 29 margin.

Central Catholic had six different players score during its 17-0 second-half run. Will Hubertz led the Knights with 17 points and had eight rebounds, while T.J. Thieme collected 12 points and four rebounds. Senior guard Tyler Brand, meanwhile, got all of his 13 points in the second half.

The Tigers (0-2), who were coming off a 46-43 loss at Hamilton Heights to open the season, were led by junior guard Justin Brandâ??s 16 points, including 10 in the first quarter. Senior guard Josh Whitlach scored nine of his 11 points in the second quarter.

Central Catholic now heads into the 3rd annual J & C Hoops Classic at Lafayette Jefferson’s Crawley Center Nov. 28-29 to face county rival, Class 4A 23rd-ranked McCutcheon (1-0), in Game 1. Lebanon, meanwhile, will host Crawfordsville Dec. 2.

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4A FINAL: Lowell shocks Roncalli with 14-point fourth quarter, ends Rebels 4-peat bid, 28-27

By Brandon Jones

Staff Writer

INDIANAPOLIS â??? Things did not look good early for coach Kirk
Kennedy and his unranked Lowell Red Devils against three-time defending
champion Roncalli, but they got much better as the Class 4A
championship game progressed. And although quarterback Jimmy Ritter did
throw a touchdown pass on the evening, it was a play that the Lowell
senior made on defense that ended up making the difference in the Red
Devilsâ?? shocking, come-from-behind win.


Lowell
running back Scott Gray gets horizontal at the goal line during
Lowell&acutes thrilling 28-27 Class 4A victory over Roncalli. The
5&acute8″ senior scored three touchdowns and had 153 yards rushing
in the upset win over the three-time defending state champs. Photo by
Natalie Evans

The thrilling 28-27 victory for Lowell (11-4) stunned six-time
state champion coach Bruce Scifres and his Roncalli Rebels (12-3), who
were seeking their fourth consecutive 4A state championship and the
schoolâ??s ninth overall.

The contest got off to a nice start for the sixth-ranked Rebels
with excellent field position after senior Brandon Axum returned the
opening kickoff to the Lowell 41-yard line. Championship teams cash in
on an opportunity like this, and the Rebels did not disappoint.
Roncalli capped off a nine-play drive with a four-yard plunge by senior
running back Chris Merkel (22 carries, 109 yards) to draw first blood,
and following senior Chad Hertâ??s extra-point kick it was Roncalli 7,
Lowell 0 nearly halfway through the first quarter.

The Red Devils, appearing in their first-ever state championship in
any sport, marched down the field as if they had been here many times
before. A grueling 15-play drive ended in disappointment, however, as a
27-yard field goal was nullified by a false start, and the Red Devils
were unsuccessful on the subsequent 33-yard attempt.

The Rebels took over possession of the ball but could not add to
their lead as the Lowell defense stepped up to the challenge. (Hint: It
would happen again twice much later in the contest when it mattered
most.) The Rebels did manage to pick up two first downs, giving
themselves some breathing room to punt.

Lowellâ??s succeeding drive started poorly but ended with the desired
result. After another false-start penalty on first down, the Devils
faced a 1st-and-15. A successful rushing attempt to the left side by
5â??8â? senior Scott Gray (19 carries, 153 yards, three touchdowns) netted
seven yards to cut the yardage in half, but it would be Grayâ??s next
carry that allowed the Red Devils to position themselves for the tying
score.

Gray took a pitch left from Ritter and turned the corner. Fifty-six
yards later, the Red Devils were banging on the door at the Roncalli
10. On third down, Gray got the big payoff by way of an eight-yard run
over the Rebels defense, tying the score at 7 after sophomore David
Langâ??s extra point.

The Rebels would answer, however — and in a BIG way. Just two
plays into the next possession, junior quarterback Paul Corsaro (7 of
10 for 120 yards with two touchdowns and one interception) found senior
tight end Andy Barkocy after a beautiful play-action fake. Barkocy, who
had gotten behind the entire Red Devil defense, hauled in the pass for
a 64-yard score, and Hertâ??s PAT put the Rebels back in front, 14-7,
just 52 seconds later.

Things went from bad to worse for the underdog Lowell squad on its
next possession. Needing a score to gain back some of the gameâ??s
momentum, the Red Devils did just the opposite. Gray, the hero on the
previous drive, fumbled on second down, and Roncalli senior defensive
end Brandon Roberts fell on the ball. The Rebels were in great position
again as they took possession at the Lowell 22.

Four plays later, the Rebels would extend their lead to two
touchdowns. After three consecutive runs by Merkel to the Red Devilsâ??
11, Corsaro turned to the air once more for the score. This time he
found senior running back Bill Perry from 11 yards out and, following
the PAT, the Rebels were now in front by a comfortable 14 point margin
with just 2:30 to go in the first half.

Both teams would trade possessions on the remaining series of the
first half, with Lowell losing the ball on downs at the Roncalli 30
after wasting a chance to cut the deficit.

The three-time defending state champs thus went into the locker room riding high with a 21-7 advantage.

â??We werenâ??t playing Red Devil football in the first half — we
practically gave them their 21 first-half points,â? said Kennedy. â??We
were making silly mistakes that we knew would get us beat in this game.

â??Our adjustments (in the second half) were in our hearts and in our
brains. We told them at halftime they had 24 minutes for the rest of
their life.�

Coming out of the locker room knowing they needed a score and fast,
the Red Devils responded in the biggest of ways. A 15-play, 70-yard
drive that ate almost seven minutes off the clock was finalized with a
one-yard dive by Gray. The extra point was successful, and Lowell had
cut the lead in half at 21-14.

Roncalli, however, answered the bell on its next possession. The
Rebels took possession on their own 30 and marched 70 yards in just
nine plays. The drive ended with senior running back Brandon Axum
getting the ball on a reverse play and tight-roping his way down the
south sideline for a 24-yard touchdown.

It may have been the next play, though, that decided the outcome of
the game. The extra-point attempt by Hert was blocked by Ritter, who
doubles as a linebacker for the Red Devils. Yet Roncalli still held
what seemed to be a safe lead at 27-14 with 1:25 remaining in the third
period.

First-timer Lowell showed no fear in trailing by 13 after three
quarters. The Red Devils took advantage of a tired Roncalli defense to
cut into the lead once again. This time, it was via an air attack.
After the ninth play of the drive got the ball to the Roncalli 20,
Ritter (7 for 13 for 67 yards) passed to senior tailback Jeff Clemens,
and Clemens squeezed the ball inside the pylon. Following the extra
point, the lead was now down to a precarious six points with 9:12 to
go.

The Rebels gave Lowell a gift on their next touch of the ball.
Facing a 3rd-and-10 at the Roncalli 30, Corsaro rolled out to his right
and was looking for a receiver to move the chains. Instead, he found
Lowell junior linebacker Josh Kuiper, who took the ball 18 yards in the
other direction to the Rebel 28.

Despite an increasingly crazy RCA Dome crowd, Lowell remained calm
and cool in reaching the end zone in just five plays. The Red Devils
took their first lead of the evening on a four-yard run by Gray, and
the critical point-after by Lang put Lowell up, 28-27, with just 5:51
remaining.

The Rebels had been in this position before and climbed out of it,
and it certainly appeared that had once again when Axum took the
kickoff up the right sideline for what appeared to be the go-ahead
score. But the Rebels were flagged for a clipping violation, sending
them back deep under the shadows of their own goalpost.

They knew they needed this drive to claim another state championship, and so did the maniacal fans on both sides of the dome.

The drive looked promising as the Rebels surrounded a 14-yard sack
of Corsaro with seven running plays that totaled 39 yards in moving the
ball to the Roncalli 45, including a critical two-yard run by Merkel on
4th-and-1. But another Merkel two-yard run, a five-yard pass, and an
incompletion set up 4th-and-3 for the Rebels, and this time their luck
finally evaporated with 75 seconds remaining when Corsaro was sacked by
Lowell senior linebacker Chris Lampa.

Lowell took a knee three times, and the improbable had occurred.
Public School â??Davidâ? had slain Catholic powerhouse â??Goliath,â? and the
unranked Lowell Red Devils claimed the schoolâ??s first-ever state
championship in any sport.

â??Itâ??s not like Roncalli football to give up leads,â? said a weary
Scifres, pointing out that all five of Roncalliâ??s postseason games
leading up to this one went right down to the wire. â??They blocked a
PAT, we throw an interception, and we have a long touchdown return
called back.

â??Some of that is self-imposed and obviously a lot of that has to do
with their kids playing their hearts out and making plays. Lowell has a
great team and they did a great job.�

Kennedy said the little things mattered late in the game just as much as the huge plays his defense came up with.

â??Everybody will talk about the interception, the blocked extra
point, or the fourth-down stop,â? Kennedy said. â??A lot of plays were
made in the second half, and every one contributed to our win.�

Among those contributing heavily on the defensive side of the ball
for the Red Devils were defensive back Clemens (12 tackles, including
10 solos) and Kuiper (nine tackles with seven solos). Lowell did a
solid job in holding Merkel, Roncalliâ??s leading rusher at 134 yards per
game, to 25 yards less than his average and just one score.

The Rebels, meanwhile, struggled a bit more with Gray, who entered
the fray averaging 156 yards a game with 26 touchdowns. Leading the
Roncalli defense were linebacker Perry (12 tackles, seven of which were
solo), senior defensive lineman Steve Wilson (11, four), and senior
defensive back Jordan Agresta (eight, seven).

Two Class 4A state championship records set

The 64-yard touchdown pass from Corsaro to Barkocy in the second
quarter established two Class 4A championship game records: longest
touchdown pass and longest touchdown reception.

The old marks were 62 yards, set by Franklin Central thrower
Brian Beckman and receiver Brian Burton in the Flashesâ?? 34-14 win over
Hobart in 1990.

Roncalliâ??s Banich receives Mental Attitude Award

Members of the IHSAA Executive Committee selected Roncalli
linebacker Nick Banich as the winner of the Phil N. Eskew Mental
Attitude Award for Class 4A. A football co-captain and two-year
starter, Banich also has participated in basketball and has been a
three-year member of the track team, having qualified for the state
meet last spring.

The son of Joseph and Jeannie Banich of New Palestine, Banich
maintains a 4.1 GPA while enrolled in Honors and Advanced Placement
courses at the school. He has been heavily involved in many school
activities, including German Club, Student Council, and the National
Honor Society. He also was a part of the IHSAA Student Leadership
Conference and won the Kiwanis Club Service Leadership Award.

Banich, who is undecided on his college plans at this juncture,
said his teammates let one another down in not getting the win. But he
understood the loss came to a quality opponent.

â??We knew they were tough,â? said Banich. â??We said in the locker room
at halftime there are 20-some seniors on that team, and they are not
going to give up in the second half.�

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5A FINAL: Warren Central's six first-half touchdowns pave way for 3-peat in 55-20 demolition of Hamilton SE

By Brandon Jones

Contributing Writer

INDIANAPOLIS â??? Senior quarterback Dexter Taylor and the Warren
Central offensive line went to work early and in businesslike fashion
Nov. 26 in leading the third-ranked Warriors to their third consecutive
Class 5A state championship, 55-20, over unranked Hamilton Southeastern.


You
can tell by the expression on this Hamilton Southeastern fan&acutes
face just how poorly things were going in the first half of the Royals?´
5A final against two-time champ Warren Central. Photo by Natalie Evans

The Warriors (14-1) are talented enough on the offensive side of
the football to win many ballgames without much trouble. However, when
you add in the fact that Hamilton Southeasternâ??s offense turned the
ball over after going three-and-out on its possession, you end up with
scenarios such as the six first-half touchdowns with which Warren
Central lit up the RCA Dome scoreboard.

â??Our kids came to play every night, bounced back from a tough loss
to Lawrence North and played well really well all six games in the
playoffs,� said Warren Central coach Kevin Wright, who had the
following to say about this Warren Central squad compared with some of
the outstanding Warrior teams of the past:

â??This team has to rank right up there. Other than the Lawrence North game, we played as well as we could play.â?

Yikes.

The Royals received the opening kickoff and started their first
drive at their own 17. After getting nothing going through the air or
on the ground, they were forced to punt from deep in their own
territory.

Warren Centralâ??s potent offense is enough to scare any opposing
defense that takes the field. The fact that its first drive began in
Hamilton Southeastern territory only magnified the dominance. The
Warriors wasted no time as the Royals, focusing on talented running
back Darren Evans, forgot to account for the teamâ??s other Mr. Football
candidate, Taylor.

Taylor ran for 26 yards on his first carry, then waltzed into the
end zone after a 22-yard scamper on his second rushing attempt. The
Warriorsâ?? Machy Magdalinos added the first of seven extra-point kicks,
and with 9:09 remaining in the opening quarter, the score was 7-0.

After gaining over 20 yards of offense and earning two first downs
on the ensuing possession, things started to look up for Hamilton
Southeastern. Running back Josh Powers fumbled, however, and the
Warriors pounced on it at the HSE 42.

It was now time for Evans to go to work. A heavy dosage of the
junior tailback was the focus early on in the possession, and
Southeastern was ready. Sort of.

Forcing the Warriors to make a decision on 4th-and-2, the Royals
defense appeared to have the inside running game figured out. However,
they once again forgot to account for Taylor, who not only ran for the
first down but gained 27 yards to set up the next Warren score. It was
Evansâ?? turn to strike paydirt this time as he went into the end zone
untouched for a 14-0 advantage for the Warriors.

Things turned from bleak to worse for Hamilton Southeastern as the
Royals attempted to get back into the contest via the passing game. On
the very first play of their next drive, quarterback Taylor Hoffmanâ??s
pass was picked off by Warrenâ??s defensive MVP, junior Jerimy Finch.
Finch displayed a variety of sneaky moves in getting the ball all the
way down to the Royalsâ?? 3. Two plays later, the Warriors poured it on
with another touchdown run by Taylor.

â??It wasnâ??t a fluke that we were here,â? said Southeastern coach Rob
Cutter. â??We beat some good football teams and we deserved to be here. I
just wish that we couldâ??ve played better.

â??We knew coming in that things would have to go well for us to win. But we started out by turning the ball over twice.â?

With three minutes still left in the first quarter, the score was now 21-0.

Southeastern showed signs of life on its next possession and
finally gave its supporters something to cheer about. After a fair
catch on the kickoff, Royal running back Marcus Spann carried the ball
for his longest sprint of the evening. A 50-yard march into Warren
Centralâ??s side of the field gave the squad some optimism, and
Southeastern carried that momentum all the way into the end zone when
an eight-yard connection between Hoffman and Nico Walker capped off a
six-play, 82-yard drive. Following Chris Summersâ?? point after, the
Royals had cut the lead to 14 points with 10 seconds remaining in the
first quarter.

The momentum Southeastern had just gained evaporated nine plays
later. The Warriorsâ?? longest drive to that point netted 80 yards and,
to no oneâ??s surprise, all of that yardage was acquired on the ground.
The Warriorsâ?? O-line overpowered the Royals as Taylor gained 46 yards
and Evans the remaining 34, with Taylor earning yet another touchdown
on a 13-yard run. The Warriors were now back ahead, 28-7.

After forcing a Royals punt, the Warren offense went back to work
and put the dagger in Southeasternâ??s hopes. Senior Brad Ellington got
into the mix this time with a seven-yard sweep where he found the left
corner of the end zone, padding Warrenâ??s lead at 35-7.

The Warriorsâ?? defense must have felt as if it was not garnering
enough attention as the offense was putting on a dominating
performance. Southeastern understood that it clearly needed to pass the
ball to have any shot of staying with the amazing Warren O â?¦ and it
cost them. Finch picked off a second Hoffman pass and once again weaved
through would-be tacklers, all the way to the end zone this time, as
the Warriors added to their already dominating lead.

A missed extra point was the only thing that went wrong for the Warriors all evening as they now held a 41-7 lead.

As one rabid Warren Central fan in the stands exclaimed after the
Warriors scored their sixth touchdown of the first half: “I toldja!
Forty points in the first half! I TOLDJA!”

Hamilton Southeastern did manage to drive the ball into Warrior
territory late in the second quarter to provide some excitement. Senior
kicker Chris Summers came onto the field for a 60-yard field goal
attempt as time expired, but a short kick meant the first half of
Southeasternâ??s dream season finale would end with the Royals staring at
a 34-point deficit.

Something unique happened on the Warriors first possession of the
second half: a punt! The Warriors could get nothing going, and turned
the ball over after three plays.

Southeastern, however, also got nada
and, obviously rattled by the fact that they were staring at a 90-plus
yards to put points on the board, the Royals once again turned the ball
over. The Royals mishandled the ball attempting a punt from their own
end zone, and Warren central senior Joey Hodges pounced on it at the
2-yard line.

One play later, as expected, the Warriors cashed in. Evans powered
through the Royalsâ?? defensive line to put the Warriors on top, 48-7.

Though the game was far out of hand at this point, Southeastern
managed to put two more scores on the board. Two Hoffman passes to
Jacob Graham, along with a Taylor PASS (his only one of the evening) to
Chris Adkins, would cap off the scoring

The final: 55-20.

â??Defensively, we just couldnâ??t hold them — their offense is
incredible,â? Cutter said. â??The speed that they have was something that
we could not match.

â??This isnâ??t unusual for them to win like this.â?

Taylor ended up with 158 yards rushing on 12 attempts and had
three rushing touchdowns to go along with one passing TD to lead the
Warriors.

â??I have not seen a better football player than Dexter Taylor this
year,â? Wright said. â??Anybody that watched the first half tonight has to
get his vote (Mr. Football).

â??I never thought I would have a quarterback better than (2003 Mr. Football) Desmond Tardy, but Dexter is awfully good.â?

Spann led the Royals with 104 yards rushing to go along with Hoffmanâ??s two touchdown passes.

Wright makes it 2 for 2 this weekend in matching fatherâ??s Sheridan state title

Warren Centralâ??s lopsided victory allowed Wright to save face at
the family dinner table following his fatherâ??s seventh state
championship Friday. (In his 40th season at Sheridan, Larry â??Budâ?
Wright led the Blackhawks to the Class A title with a 21-7 win over
Knightstown.)

â??If I didnâ??t win and he did, I would have heard about it for the
rest of the year,â? said Wright the Coaching Genius Younger. â??Itâ??s been
a great Thanksgiving weekend for our whole family, and Iâ??m just glad we
could come out on top.�

Southeasternâ??s Summers wins Mental Attitude Award

Not surprisingly, seven Class 5A championship game records were set
by the Warren Central Colts â??? er, Warriors. That includes six new
marks, and a couple of â??em arenâ??t what youâ??d consider good records:

â?¢ Most combined points: 75 (OK, Hamilton Southeastern helped on this one)

â?¢ Longest kickoff return: 76 yards, by Anthony Vaden

â?¢ Most PAT kicks (individual): 7, by Machy Magdalinos

â?¢ Most PAT kicks (team): 7

â?¢ Most penalties: 9

â?¢ Most penalty yards: 93

Additionally, Warren tied its own record for most touchdowns with
eight, a record it originally set two years ago in a 57-7 rout of Penn.

Southeasternâ??s Summers wins Mental Attitude Award

Hamilton Southeastern senior kicker/punter Chris Summers is the
2005 recipient of the Phil N. Eskew Mental Attitude Award for Class 5A
presented by the IHSAA Executive Committee. An Associated Press
All-State selection in 2004, Summers made 14 field goals and 42 extra
points to total 84 points this season, including five field goals of 40
yards or longer with a long of 52.

On kickoffs, he has had 35 touchbacks. In punting, Summers averaged
38 yards, with 14 inside the 20-yard line and just one touchback. He
ranks 44th in his senior class of 708 with an 11.18 cumulative grade
point average on a 12.0 scale.

â??Chris is a role model to his peers,â? said Robert Albano, Hamilton
Southeasternâ??s principal. â??He sets a good example in faith, spirit,
kindness, and compassion. He is a gentleman at all times, and he has
earned the respect of all of his teachers, coaches, and our entire
administrative team.�

The son of Clay and Diane Summers serves as a volunteer peer tutor,
a Special Olympics volunteer, and a dinner server to underprivileged
children at Edna Martin Center. Summers also has volunteered for the
Hamilton County Good Samaritan Christmas Project to supply needy
families with food and toys.

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