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This Week in HS Sports - September
28, 2009
Road trips, blathering broadcasters, clueless band directors and
more...
We got our first up-close-and-personal look at the No. 1
team in the Greater Houston area, The Woodlands Highlanders,
last Friday night in Port Arthur against the Port Arthur
Memorial Titans. The Highlanders looked solid, but not
spectacular, in their 24-7 win over Memorial. They scored
two touchdowns, kicked two field goals and posted two
safeties in picking up their fifth win of the season.
But perhaps the most impressive thing about the victory was
that it came on the road—again. The Highlanders have made
more than token trips in their pre-district schedules.
They’ve traveled to CFISD’s Pridgeon Stadium (25 miles from
campus), Katy ISD’s Rhodes Stadium (55 miles) and Clear
Creek ISD’s District Stadium (61 miles). But at 123 miles
from their campus, Port Arthur Memorial Stadium was the
granddaddy of their road trips—and potentially the one that
will be most like any November playoff roadies they’ll have
to make.
“We knew that what we did on the road might be the tale of
the tape as far as how we would respond during the season,”
head coach Mark Schmid told us before the Port Arthur game.
“We’re really pleased with what we’ve done and how the kids
have responded and it’s going to go a long way in helping us
be successful this season.”
Translation: these pre-district road trips are going to be
similar to what TWHS will face in the Region II playoffs,
and Schmid thinks that his team has benefitted from
traveling so much so early.
Port Arthur Memorial acquitted themselves very well against
the Highlanders. The PAM defense will be the key to any
success they have against North Shore in two weeks. The
linebacking corps, anchored by Earl Hines and Ashland
Wilson, is solid. The defensive ends, Stanton Smith and
Treshod Lewis, are strong and quick off the ball. The
secondary caused problems for The Woodlands’ passing game.
The problem with the Titans’ defense on Friday was twofold:
they played most of the game on their side of the 50 yard
line and they spent more than two-thirds of the game on the
field. Memorial’s offense had trouble generating much at all
against the Highlander defense.
And if there was one area where the Highlanders unexpectedly
impressed, it was on the defensive side of the ball. DE Cody
Davis and LB Perry Cooper especially stood out and, overall,
the team swarms to the ball and hits hard on every play.
They forced Memorial’s QB Corwin Keal to hurry throws and
they basically shut down the rushing duo on Ronzell King and
Daleon Stinette.
Looking ahead, the Lufkin game for The Woodlands will be
interesting, especially since it involves another
significant (110 mile) road trip to Abe Martin Stadium in
Lufkin. But the Woodlands should cruise into the playoffs
well-prepared for that ride. And we now believe that Port
Arthur Memorial may actually be no worse than the third best
team in District 21-5A.
* * * * *
It was a weekend of upsets in the Houston area. Maybe none
was more surprising than the Dekaney Wildcats’ pounding of
the Westfield Mustangs in their District 13-5A opener and
Dekaney’s homecoming game. Nobody in their right mind (who
isn’t a parent of a Dekaney player) would have ever
predicted that.
But thanks to a superb effort by a sophomore named Trey
Williams, who rushed for—get this—375 yards in the game, the
Wildcats pulled out a 47-39 stunner over a team that, in the
pre-district season, looked potentially headed for an
undefeated season and a deep playoff run.
The effort by Williams was so inspiring that it prompted one
web media member to call in a report to one of the local
postgame scoreboard shows on Friday and proclaim the
sophomore to be the best running back ever. Ever.
The saddest part of that little episode was the hosts of
that scoreboard show didn’t even question or challenge him
on that statement.
Now, while we did not see the performance young Mr. Williams
gave on Friday and will, from this point forward, watch his
box scores with much more interest, we can’t help but think
that one game does not a ‘Best-Ever’ tag earn.
Frankly, the statement sent us scurrying to high school
record books to find out where Williams’ 375 ranks all-time
and, while we have yet to determine the exact ranking, we
can tell you it’s not even in the top 10 single-game rushing
performances in the history of Texas high school football.
Texas is a state that has produced the likes of Earl
Campbell, Eric Dickerson, Billy Sims, Ken ‘The Sugar Land
Express’ Hall, Doak Walker, Cedric Benson and so many more
great running backs. To suddenly pass the mantle to a high
school sophomore seems unwise and unfair—to Williams.
Trey undoubtedly will be—and rightfully so—mentioned across
the state as the offensive player of the week for Week 4 of
the 2009 season. But let’s allow him to just be a
tenth-grader who helped his underdog team to the biggest win
in his school’s young football history, at least for now.
Maybe in 2011, we can start comparing him to the Tyler Rose.
Until then, we say, 'Way to go, Trey Williams, for your
outstanding performance!'
* * * * *
Speaking of the greatest individual-game rushing
performances by Texas high school players, how many of the
names in the all-time top 10 would you recognize?
They are
Darryl
Ellis (Somerville, 587 yards, 1998);
Tyson
Thompson (Irving, 525 yards, 1998);
Ken Hall
(Sugar Land, 520 yards, 1953);
Cleon
Williams (Boling, 517 yards, 1991);
Phillip
Graves (Hutto, 517 yards, 2001);
Devin
Thomas (San Antonio Madison, 483 yards,
2006);
Larry
Boyd (Union Hill, 481 yards, 1988);
Ronnie
Ashmore (San Antonio Edgewood, 476 yards,
1985);
Eric
Bizer (Centerville, 467 yards, 2003);
Buddy Hanson (Tom Bean, 467 yards, 2002).
Thanks to the folks at
TxPrepsFootball.com for the list.
* * * * *
Back to the subject of Port Arthur, we are connoisseurs of
fine press box cuisine, and the good people at Memorial
Stadium—the new and improved Memorial Stadium—quickly put
themselves at the top of our list.
Chicken fried steak with mashed potatoes, seasoned green
beans and carrots was the fare for the night. And they had
people come deliver the meals to us (and then check on us to
make sure everything was satisfactory)! This wasn’t your
average every-man-for-himself rush to the five Little
Caesars’ pizzas on the counter.
Kudos to the folks in Port Arthur for approving some bonds
that built a new high school campus for Memorial and funded
some very nice improvements to the press box and scoreboard
(i.e., video replay board) at the stadium. Their only regret
may ultimately be that they didn’t funnel a few of the
dollars into some field turf for the surface. But, hey,
that’s what school district bond elections every two or
three years are for, right?
* * * * *
Being the complete source for all things related to high
school athletics, we get tidbits of info from not only the
teams, but also the bands, drill teams, cheerleaders and
mascots for those teams.
Here’s one we have to share that proves the point that band
directors just don’t get it…
In the first half of a Saturday night game in the Houston
area (we won’t tell you which one), a band director was
heard to chastise his band members for cheering too wildly
and loudly for their football team in the first half of
their game. His reasoning? The band needed to save their
energy for the halftime show.
That led us to the question: how much energy does a halftime
show require and how relevant to performing at halftime is
screaming your lungs out for your team? We've never seen a
marching choir at half...except maybe at that School for the
Performing Arts game...
Now we have to watch these band shows with a little more
intensity to see who is or isn’t leaving it all on the field
at the half.
Previous stories
:
August 15, 2009
August
20, 2009
August
26, 2009
August
31, 2009
September 8, 2009
September 16, 2009
September 18, 2009
September 25, 2009 |