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OCTOBER 6, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
Efficient Eagles Pop Patriots GHS Scores On 8 Of First 9 Possessions In 56-29 Victory By Galen Wellnicki Sports Editor
The Eagles Tyrin Stone picks off a pass intended for the Patriots Zion Hester in Friday night’s District 19-5A battle at GISD Athletic Complex. Georgetown defeated East View, 56-29, to take a 4-1 edge in the all-time series between the two cross-town rivals. Photo by Russell Rinn.
East View Looking To Run The Table In Final Four Games By Jon Whittemore Advocate Correspondent
After losing to crosstown rival Georgetown, 56-29, last Friday night at the GISD Athletic Complex, East View looks to shore up a defense that is allowing 39 points per game in district play and reestablish its ground attack during this last month of the season. The points per game average includes a shutout against Bastrop Cedar Creek on Friday, Sept. 23. The Patriots now stand at 2-4 for the season and 1-3 in 19-5A competition. District games remaining are against Pflugerville Connally, Hutto, Elgin and Bastrop. With three district loses already, realistically their chances for post-season play are slight. However, to talk to the coach, winning out is a realistic goal. “We believe that we have a good offense if we can run the ball and stay patient,” coach Rob Davies said. “Against Georgetown we got behind early and resorted to passing (28 second half attempts) trying to score quickly and win the game. We scored 29 and just need to tackle and cover better from here on out. I believe that we can win the rest.” That campaign will begin at home at 7:30 p.m. Friday when the Patriots tackle unbeaten Pflugerville Connally, the district's surprise team to date. The Cougars were a consensus pick to finish sixth in the final standings. However, Connally, under Jason Cecil, have rolled off five consecutive victories, including wins over district opponents Hutto (35-30), Elgin (28-14) and Bastrop (42-21). EV cont. on B6
Georgetown’s Beau Corrales is brought down by the Patriots Mark Rodriguez in Friday’s rivalry game in Georgetown. Corrales caught 11 passes for 165 yards and 3 touchdowns. Photo by Russell Rinn.
Statistically, Georgetown is scoffing at those long-held beliefs that ball-control football is the key to success. The Eagles are 4-0 in District 19-5A after bouncing arch-rival East View, 56-29, this past Friday night at the GISD Athletic Complex. In those four victories, coach Jason Dean's Eagles have outscored the opposition by an average of 22 points a game despite running a combined total of 83 fewer plays than the opposition, including a scrimmage play differential of 28 in the victory over the Patriots. GHS has been outgained in three of those four contests. "We're being efficient with our offense," GHS coach Jason Dean said recently. In the win over East View, GHS scored seven touchdowns on 52 scrimmage plays, including four touchdown passes. That's a touchdown every 7.4 plays. The Patriots averaged a touchdown every 20 snaps, not counting kicks. Georgetown, 6-0 on the season, led 42-8 late in the first half, putting the Patriots (2-4, 1-3 in 19-5A) in the uncomfortable position of having to ditch their usually potent running attack for the passing of senior quarterback Cameron Nowell, who rallied to the challenge with 27 completions in 45 attempts for 282 yards. "We got off to a great start," Dean said of an offense that scored on eight of its first nine possessions. "We did what we wanted. Defensively, we gave up yardage, but we made the stops when we needed to. We also took advantage of a pair of turnovers." The presence of veteran quarterback Chandler Herman and standout receiver Beau Corrales, who at times this season looks like Bull Corrales, and multi-purpose junior Caden Leggett working behind a strong line make offensive efficiency much-more likely. "We played really well tonight," Herman said. "Chandler was very accurate and efficient (23 of 30 for 267 yards)," Dean elaborated. "We had possibly our best running game of the season, and Luiz Diaz continued to kick the ball well. As for stopping their running game (especially sophomore Zion Hester on the edge), we worked hard all week on that area." "We worked on the stretch play and pretty well knew what they were going to do," GHS defensive coordinator David Patterson said. The Eagles have moved up to No. 9 in The Old Coach 5A rankings and held steady at 13 in Texas Football's Top 25. They also improved in The Associated Press Class 5A balloting, standing 12th in points, but still 17 points from cracking the top 10. The road to the playoffs for the Eagles will get much tougher over the final four starts of the season. They face Rouse (3-2, 2-1) at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Bible Stadium in Leander before returning home to face Cedar Park (5-0, 3-0) on Friday, Oct. 14. They visit last-place Bastrop Cedar Creek on Friday, Oct. 21, take Oct. 28 off, and then close the regular season at home against Pflugerville Connally on. Nov. 4. "We've got to stay focused," Herman said. "We’re confident, but we know these games are going to be tough. We need to play hard and stay sharp." Dean sees the Rouse Raiders as a tough opponent—especially on the road. The GHS cont. on B7
VOLLEYBALL PAGE B2
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GHS Gets Payback Over EV, 3-0 By Galen Wellnicki Sports Editor
Maybe it's not quite time to consign Georgetown's hopes to reach the Class 5A state volleyball playoffs to the same shelf as such extinct species as the passenger pigeon, woolly mammoth and saber-tooth cat. Coach Jenny Richardson's Lady Eagles entered last Friday's showdown with East View standing 3-5 after the first round of the District 19-5A title chase. Georgetown was a decided underdog in that contest on its own hardwoods. The visiting Patriots roared into Eagle Gym with a 7-2 record, including a 3-0 sweep of Bastrop on Tuesday, Sept. 27. However, the district form chart, proved meaningless on rivalry night with the two schools also colliding in football at the GISD Athletic Complex just a few 100 yards away. GHS, which lost the first meeting 3-1 at East View, charged back to sweep the Patriots, 3-0 (25-17, 25-16, 25-16)— an aggregate 75-49. East View's victory in the first meeting was the program's first ever over the Eagles. After Friday, the series stands 9-1 in Georgetown's favor. "I'm so proud of the girls tonight," Richardson said. "The program got the sweep (varsity, junior varsity and two freshman victories). The varsity played incredibly well. I couldn't be happier for the girls. They worked so hard in practice this week. It paid off big." GHS did have Tuesday off with its mandated district bye. The upset victory put the Lady Eagles in sixth place, but just two games out of fourth place behind a front-running trio of Rouse (10-0), Cedar Park (8-1) and East View (7-3). Hutto and Bastrop Cedar Creek entered this week with district marks of 6-4 and 5-5, respectively. Georgetown faces a critical week in its campaign
Georgetowns Alex Bradley attacks the East View defense duirng last Friday’s match. The Lady Eagles avenged their earlier loss with a 3-0 sweep of the Patriots. Photo by Russell Rinn.
to reach the postseason. They played last-place Pflugerville Connally (010) on the road on Tuesday and then faced a test with Rouse at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the Raiders' gym. Rouse downed the Lady Eagles, 3-1, earlier in the campaign. At 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, GHS will entertain Hutto. The Lady Hippos won the first meeting 3-1. GHS, now 17-20 on the year, was led against East View by junior Emily Ellis and senior Camryn McGinnis with 10 and eight kills, respectively. Senior Corinne Novak had nine kills for the Patriots, who had an .071 hitting percentage for the match. The Lady Eagles hit .158. While GHS came into the match off an open date,
East View had blown up the Bastrop Lady Bears, 25-19, 25-21, 25-15, behind an offense that hit .243, including 12 kills by Novak and seven each by Annie Burke, Camryn Miller and Madison Heald. The Patriots, who went aceless against GHS, had 10 against the Bears—four by Heald, and three each by Burke and Novak. Asked what she liked about the Patriots' performance in their first match of the second round, coach Kara Del Bosque said, "I was very proud of the way we played. We did not get lethargic or complacent." East View had its open date on Tuesday and played 6A Harker Heights, which
The Lady Eagles and Patriots met in a rematch last Friday in Eagle gym with Georgetown winning the match in straight sets. Photo by Russell Rinn.
Eagles cont. on B5
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Carrillo, Rowe Shine At McNeil GHS Heads To Westlake Meet On Friday
East View placed two runners—junior Guillermo Carrillo and freshman Mia Rowe—among the top 10 finishers in the Class 5A varsity divisions of the prestigious McNeil Invitational this past Saturday at Old Settlers Park in Round Rock. Carrillo finished fourth in the 5,000-meter boys race with a time of 16 minutes, 7.12 seconds—18.04 seconds behind winner Carter Floyd of Humble Kingwood Park. Patriots’ sophomore Luis Aldana missed finishing in the top 10 by two places, finishing 12th in 16:23.48. The East View boys placed 18th in the 42-team field with 475 points—the best showing by the five 19-5A teams in the field. Sanger outscored Willis, 111-124, for the team title. In the 5,000-meter girls event, Rowe was clocked in 19:30.29 in a field topped by an 18:30.69 by Prosper's Abby Williams. Prosper dominated the team race scoring 30 points as it captured four of the top five positions with its fifth runner placing 18th. Marble Falls was a distant second with 110 points. East View finished 23rd in the 39-team girls competition with 618 points. "I am very pleased with how the team is improving," East View coach Michael Burton said. "Mia Rowe attacked the race and set the tone of all of our teams to follow. She finished the race only 4 seconds off of East View's school record. "Both Guillermo Carrillo and Luis Andana broke our previous school record of 16:30 set in 2013 by Jose Pena. They got out hard and never backed down. Freshman, Alvin Gusman (17:27), stepped up into our No. 3 spot with his varsity debut and personal record by 50 seconds. "Even though we were down some of our top varsity runners, the rest of the team picked up the slack" Georgetown took the weekend off as Eagles
coaches Andrew Braun and Kellye Richardson elected to rest their teams prior to the climactic races of the season. This coming weekend, Georgetown and East View will switch roles. After taking this past weekend off, Georgetown will run Friday night in Austin Westlake's Chap Invitational at SE Metropolitan Park, while East View is scheduled to take this coming weekend off. Both the Eagles and Patriots will compete in the annual Georgetown River Run at San Gabriel Park on Saturday, Oct. 15, and the District 19-5A Meet on Friday, Oct. 21, at Old Settlers Park. The top three team finishers and 10 individuals in the 19-5A championships will earn berths in the Region III-5A Meet at Kate Barr Ross Park in Huntsville on Saturday, Oct. 29. McNEIL INVITATIONAL At Old Settlers Park, Round Rock GIRLS 5A VARSITY (5,000 meters, 304 finishers) Team leaders (39 teams)—Prosper 30, Marble Falls 110, College Station 112, Edcouch-Elsa 227, Willis 264 (District 19-5A schools: 14. Hutto, 386; 23. East View, 618 , 10-81157-161-209-215; 33. Elgin, 874; 34. Bastrop Cedar Creek, 910; 36. Bastrop, 1,001). Top individuals—1. Abby Williams, Prosper, 18:30.69; 2. Allie Taylor, Prosper, 18:51.20; 3. Stephanie Brown, College Station, 18:57.17; 4. Tatum Castillo, Prosper, 18:57.23; 5. Emily Patterson, Prosper, 18:39.92; 6. Kelly Aguinaga, Edcouch-Elsa, 19:12.21; 7. Chloe Kelsey, CC Flour Bluff, 19:16.67; 8. Lindsey Klasek, Justin Northwest, 19:22.75; 9. Haley Villalpando, Edcouch-Elsa, 19:26.98; 10. Mia Rowe, East View, 19:30.29. Other East View scoring runners (overall finish)—81. Isdabella Zane, 20:58.16; 171. Tiare McConnell, 22:20.30; 175. Aileen Andrew, 22:22.76; 222. Charity Stinson, 23:29.67; 238. Victoria Granados, 23:45.46. BOYS 5A VARSITY (5,000 meters, 319 finishers) Team leaders (42 teams)—Sanger 111, Willis 124, El Paso Austin 152, Kingwood Park 192, College Station A&M Consolidated 205 (District 19-5A schools: 18. East View, 475, 4-12-100-177-182-200-223); 35. Hutto, 1,007; 37. Bastrop Cedar Creek, 1,036; 38. Elgin, 1,106; 40. Bastrop, 1,228). Top individuals—1. Carter Floyd, Kingwood Park, 15:49.03; 2. Jaime Vega, Willis, 15:49.68; 3.
Levi Alexander, A&M Consolidated, 15:58.59; 4, Guillermo Carrillo, East View, 16:07.12; 5. Bryson Bassinger, Sanger, 16:09.03; 6. Daniel McCutchen, Austin SFA, 16:09.27; 7. Efrian Lira, Willis, 16:11.92; 8. Aubrey Stewart, La Vernia, 16:13.25; 9. Eric Rodriguez, San Antonio Edison, 16:15.96. 10. Cesar Limones, Burleson, 16:17.49. Other East View scoring runners (overall finish)—12. Luis Andana, 16:23.48; 102. Alvin Gusman, 17:27.77; 195. Riley Bunch, 18:20.82; 200. Marshall Henry, 18:23.48; 225. Aaron Lara, 18:48.96; 252. Dakota Richardson, 19:14.93. GIRLS VARSITY A-4A (Two-mile, 403 finishers) Top team finishers (49 teams)— Dallas Ursuline 58, Bandera 174, Fairfield 178 (38. Gateway 914). Individual winner—Natalie Saenz, Austin Regents, 11:21.80. Gateway scoring runners (overall finish)—`136. Maddie Biddle, 13:21.71; 182. Tarshya Wickramasing, 13:57.64; 210. Faith Brooks, 13:48.45; 247. Samantha Davis, 14:05.97; 251. Analise Flatt, 14:06.52; 307. Alexis Santos, 14:33.36; 326. Zoe Valerio, 14:54.60. BOYS VARSITY A-4A (5,000 meter, 400 finishers) Top team finishers (48 teams)— Tornillo 33, Liberty Hill 182, Pollock Central 211 (27. Gateway, 729). Individual winner—Dustin Dominey, Spur, 16:06.64. Gateway scoring runners (overall finish)—120. Josh Garza, 18:15.21; 156. August Stroh, 18:35.24; 163. Mason Werchan, 18:39.16; 174. Avery Wolf, 18:44.07; 176. Dimitri Radkevich, 18:46.72; 195. Zach Fall, 19:00.48. 211. Jay Bryant, 19:10.51. GIRLS JV (Two miles, 576 finishers) Top team finishers (45 teams)—Katy 62, Smithson Valley 69, Flower Mound Marcus 90 (29. East View, 836; 43. Gateway, 1,304). Individual winner—Vanessa Budde, Vandegrift, 11:50.15. East View scoring runners (overall finish)—176. Mia Madrigal, 14:24.09; 268. Jasmine Bennett, 15:02.28; 293. Jessica Del Real, 15:13.32; 353. Tara Jensen, 15:38.81; 376. Sydney Sargeant, 15:49.73; 442. Hannah Casadonte, 16:20.73; 450. Krystal Walton, 16:44.80. BOYS JV (5,000 meters, 581 finishers) Top team finishers (48 teams)— Flower Mound Marcus 31, Smithson Valley 65, Montgomery 87 (17. East View, 495; 39. Gateway, 1,164). Individual winner—Alex Lopez, Rio Grande City, 16:38.25. East View scoring runners (overall finishers)—76. John Ketterhagen, 18:40.59; 112. Sebastian Carrillo, 18:59.99; 125. Cole Perry, 19:01.00; 142. Davis Bullard, 19:11.60; 143. Adam Bray, 19:21.60; 186. Miles Whelan, 19:55.06; 208. Garrett Klinger, 20:01.75. Source: My Chip Time.
East View freshman Mia Rowe works her way to a 10th place finish in the Girls 5A Varsity race at the McNeil Invitational at Old Settlers Park in Round Rock. Courtesy East View Cross Country
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OCTOBER 6, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
Volley, Y’all
SU Volleyball, Football Teams Return To Action
FOOTBALL: After taking a week off, SU will return to action when it plays Austin College in the SCAC opener for both teams at 1 p.m., Saturday at the GISD Athletic Complex. The Pirates (1-3) will go into the first game of the conference double-round-robin coming off a 42-22 loss at Wisconsin-River Falls on Sept. 24. SU also will be trying to break a two-game losing streak after beating McMurry, 24-17, in their second start of the season. Prior to the loss to Wisconsin-River Falls, the Pirates dropped a 33-22 decision to East Texas Baptist at Marshall. The Kangaroos will come to Georgetown with a 2-2 record that includes a 23-17 loss to Southwestern Assemblies of God in their last start. Austin's victories were against Howard Payne, 19-17, and Whittier, 30-17.
SU REPORT Last season, SU and Austin traded road victories. The Pirates won 35-28 in Sherman, and the Roos prevailed 20-17 in Georgetown. In other SCAC action Saturday, Trinity (2-2) will visit Texas Lutheran (0-4) at 6 p.m. in Seguin. MEN'S SOCCER: Alex Newell scored an unassisted goal at the 104-minute mark in the second overtime to give SU a 4-3 victory over Schreiner on Sunday in Kerrville. The victory improved the Pirates to 5-2 in the SCAC and 6-5 on the season. They will remain on the road this coming weekend to play Centenary in Shreveport at 5 p.m. Friday, and Austin College in Sherman at noon on Sunday. After going down 3-0 early in the second half, SU rallied to force overtime against Schreiner on Sunday. The Pirates scored three goals in a five- minute span including back-to-back goals from Jake Swonke to cap the comeback. SU's first goal was scored by G. Huntley-Jimenez off an assist by Mason Tamasek. The two teams were scoreless in the first overtime. Three and a half minutes into Friday's contest in San Antonio, top-ranked Trinity (10-0) took control with an unassisted goal by Laurence Wyke as the Tigers went on to down the Pirates, 4-0. The Tigers got an assist from the Pirates, collecting their second score on an owngoal by SU. WOMEN'S SOCCER: It was a futile weekend for SU as they dropped a pair
of 1-0 decisions to Schreiner on Sunday afternoon in Kerrville and to No. 3 Trinity in San Antonio on Friday night. The losses dropped the Pirates to 4-2 in the SCAC and 6-4 for the season. They will play Centenary at 7 p.m. Friday in Shreveport and Austin College at 2 p.m., Sunday in Sherman. Schreiner took a 1-0 win over SU, scoring in the 89th minute, as the Pirates dropped their second consecutive SCAC match. A defense-focused match led to just eight Southwestern shots and six by Mountaineers. In Friday's battle, Trinity's only goal came in the fifth minute as it was able to get past the Pirates' stingy defense. MEN'S TENNIS: SU freshman Alexis Dimanche ended his run in singles play with a loss in the semifinals at the ITA Regional Championships in Tyler on Monday morning. Dimanche dropped a 6-3, 6-1 decision to Texas-Tyler's Arthur Fagundes, who was the tournament's No. 1 seed and went on to clinch the singles title. The Pirates' fall season also wrapped up and the team will begin preparing for dual-match campaign which begins in February. WOMEN'S GOLF: SU shaved five strokes off its team score to move up one spot to finish in third place among 11 teams at the Al Jones Jr. Memorial Tournament in at the Cascades in Tyler. Leilani McDaniel showed well in her first collegiate tournament as the top finisher for the Pirates
and third overall. Her total 36-hole score of 156 (77-79) trailed tournament winner Jessica Varner of Centenary by six strokes. Valentina Olivieri finished in 19th (79-86). Mikayla Miller improved eight strokes off day one to finish with a 168 (88-80) and tied for 21st. Paige Greenan was consistent with an 85 on both days to come in tied for 26th, while Katherine Dyo took 11 strokes off her first round to finish tied for 29th (91-80). The Pirates finished with a two-day total of 653 behind UT-Tyler, 635; and Concordia, 651. Southwestern will get a true idea of where they are on the national stage as they head to Sandestin, Fla., for the Golfweek Invitational beginning October 9. MEN'S GOLF: The Pirates also will compete in the three-day Golfweek Invitational, which begins Sunday at the Raven Golf Club in Sandestin, Fla. CROSS COUNTRY: The SU men's and women's teams will compete in the University of the Incarnate Word Invitational at the Live Oak City Park in Live Oak on Saturday. The men's race is set for 8 a.m. with the women's race to follow at 8:35 a.m.
Lauren Stofle and the Lady Eagles avenged their earlier loss with a 3-0 sweep of the Patriots last Friday in Eagle Gym. Photo by Russell Rinn.
SCAC FOOTBALLRACE AT A GLANCE
Standings: Austin College, 2-2; Trinity, 2-2; Southwestern, 1-3; Texas Lutheran, 0-4. Saturday (Sept. 24) games: Wisconsin-River Falls 42, Southwestern 22; Hardin-Simmons 38, Texas Lutheran 28; Southwestern Assemblies of God 23, Austin College 17; Chapman 19, Trinity 17. Saturday's results: No games all teams have open dates. This Saturday's games: Austin College at Southwestern, GISD Athletic Center, 1 p.m.; Trinity at Texas Lutheran, 6 p.m. Source: SU Sports Information.
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Southwestern University's volleyball team— ranked No. 3 in Division III by the American Volleyball Coaches Association—returned to action this week after taking last weekend off. The Pirates (17-0) were scheduled to play Huston-Tillotson on Tuesday night at the Robertson Center, and then play host to a three-way Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference event on Friday and Saturday. SU will face Texas Lutheran at 6 p.m. Friday and then play Trinity and Schreiner at 12:30 p.m. and 5 p.m., respectively, on Saturday. SU is ranked behind Calvin College (Grand Rapids, Mich.) and Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (Calif.) in the AVCA coaches poll.
East Views Corinne Novak hitting against Bastrop last Tuesday, Sept. 27th. The Patriots picked up a win against the Bears. Photo by Russell Rinn.
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BEAU CORRALES Georgetown senior Beau Corrales caught eleven passes for 165 yards and scored three touchdowns in the Eagles’ 56-29 victory over East View this past Friday at the GISD Athletic Complex.
Corrales, who is verbally committed to attend Iowa of the Big Ten next fall, had scoring catches of 49, 16, and 13 yards. He is the leading receiver in District 19-5A by a decided margin.
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Eagles Grab Undisputed 19-5A Team Tennis Lead
EAGLES FROM PAGE B2 is coached by Del Bosque's mother, Shelly Harris. They will return to 19-5A play at 6:30 p.m. Friday at home against Connally and then travel to Rouse for a 6:30 p.m. battle on Tuesday. The top four finishers in 19-5A will advance to bi-district against the four playoff representatives from 20-5A. DISTRICT 19-5A AT A GLANCE Standings— Rouse, 10-0; Cedar Park, 8-1; East View, 7-3; Hutto, 6-4; Bastrop Cedar Creek, 5-5; Georgetown, 4-5; Bastrop, 3-7; Elgin, 1-9; Pflugerville Connally, 0-10. Tuesday's results —East View def. Bastrop, 3-0; Cedar Creek def. Connally, 3-0; Rouse def. Elgin, 3-0; Cedar Park def. Hutto, 3-1. Bye: Georgetown Friday's results—Georgetown def., East View, 3-0; Hutto def. Elgin, 3-0; Rouse def. Cedar Creek, 30-0; Bastrop def. Connally, 3-0. Bye: Cedar Park. Tuesday's matches—Georgetown at Connally, 6:30 p.m.; Rouse at Bastrop, 6:30 p.m.; Cedar Creek at Hutto, 6:30 p.m.; Cedar Park at Elgin, 6:30 p.m. Bye: East View. Friday's matches—Connally at East View, 6:30 p .m.; Georgetown at Rouse, 6:30 p.m.; Cedar Creek at Cedar Park, 6:30 p.m.; Hutto at Bastrop, 6:30 p.m. Bye: Elgin. Tuesday (Oct. 11) matches—Hutto at Georgetown, 6:30 p.m.; East View at Rouse, 6:30 p.m.; Bastrop at Cedar Park, 6:30 p.m.; Elgin at Cedar Creek, 6:30 p.m. Bye: Connally. TUESDAY (SEPT. 27) 19-5A MATCH Statistics from East View's 3-0 (2519, 25-21, 25-15) victory against Bastrop: Kills: Corinne Novak 12, Madison Heald 7, Annie Burke 7, Camryn Miller 7, Anna Steger 5, Rachel Wisian 4, Alex Stone 1. Aces: Heald 4, Burk 3, Novak 3. Assists: Heald 3, Katie Smith 3, Devon Cavanaugh 2. Blocks: Wisian 3, Miller 2, Burk 1, Novak 1, Heald 1. Digs: Smith 14, Burke 14, Heald 10, Cavanaugh 7, Ashley O'Daniel 3, Kelsey White 1, Steger 1, Novak 1. Hitting percentage: .243. Sub-Varsity: Bastrop, 2-0 (25-20, 2523). Freshman: Bastrop, 2-1 (16-25, 25-20, 25-20).
Georgetown slapped down Rouse, 18-1, this past Friday at the Minzenmayer Tennis Center to take undisputed hold on first place in the District 19-5A team tennis race as the only unbeaten team remaining in the nine-team alignment. The one-sided victory left GHS with a 4-0 record with four matches remaining in the race. Cedar Park stood second with a 4-1 record after knocking East View out of the unbeaten column, 13-6, on Friday. The loss dropped East View to 3-1. Georgetown, 17-4 for the season entering this week's action, opened at home on Tuesday against Bastrop Cedar Creek before facing a 4 p.m. Friday showdown with Cedar Park on the Timberwolves' courts. On Tuesday, Oct. 11, the Eagles will visit Hutto for a 4 p.m. match. In district action earlier in the week, the Eagles bested playoff contender Pflugerville Connally, 15-4. East View had its district bye on Tuesday, Sept. 27, and dropped a 13-10 non-district decision to Class 6A Pflugerville. The Patriots (5-8 on the year) played host to Connally on Tuesday at the Patriot Tennis Center and then are scheduled to entertain Rouse at 4 p.m. Friday. On Tuesday, Oct. 11, they will remain at home to play Bastrop at 4 p.m.
Georgetown’s Alex Bradley and the Lady Eagles avenged their earlier loss with a 3-0 sweep of the Patriots last Friday in Eagle gym. Photo by Russell Rinn.
FRIDAY'S 19-5A MATCH Statistics from Georgetown's 3-0 (25-17, 25-16, 25-16) victory against East View: Georgetown Kills (31): Emily Ellis 10, Camryn McGinnis 8, Emery Herman 4, Alex Bradley 4, Hannah Fontenot 2, Haley Glenn 2, Rachel May 1. Aces (7): Lauren Stofle 2, Herman 2, Georgia Quiroz 1, Hannah Matthews 1, McGinnis 1. Assists: Stofle 13, Quiroz 13, Matthew 2. Blocks: Ellis 1, Herman 1, McGinnis 1, Digs: Matthew 14, Quiroz 11, Herman 9, Stofle 7, Fontenot 6, McGinnis 5, Bradley 2, Ellis 2, Glenn 2, May 2. Hitting percentage: .158, East View Kills (25): Novak 9, Miller 6, Burke 5, Steger 4, Wisian 1. Aces (0)— none. Assists: Heald 21, Smith 2, Cavanaugh 1. Blocks: Novak 2, Miller 2. Digs: Smith 11, Cavanaugh 11, Buke 7, O'Daniel 6, Heald 6, Steger 3, Novak 3, Miller 2, Wisian 1. Hitting percentage: .071. Sub-Varsity: GHS also won JV and both freshman games. TEXAS GIRLS COACHES ASSOCIATION CLASS 5A VOLLEYBALL POLL 1. Highland Park. 2. Prosper. 3. Amarillo. 4. Rouse. 5. Saginaw Boswell. 6. Waxahachie. 7. Colleyville Heritage. 8. Lucas Lovejoy. 9. Mont Belvieu Barbers Hill. 10. Cedar Park. 11. Dripping Springs. 12. Corpus Christi Tuloso-Midway. 13. Humble Kingwood Park. 14. Frisco Wakeland. 15. Aledo. 16. Canyon Randall. 17. Denton Ryan. 18. Frisco Reedy. 19. Mission Veteran's Memorial. 20. El
DISTRICT 19-5A STANDINGS (Through matches of Sept. 20) (School, W-L, Composite Score) Georgetown, 4-0, 71-5; Cedar Park, 4-1, 75-20; East View, 3-1, 59-16; Pflugerville Connally, 3-1, 51-25; Rouse, 3-2, 54-41; Hutto, 2-3, 24-71; Bastrop, 1-3, 17-59; Elgin, 0-4, 9-67; Bastrop Cedar Creek, 0-5, 19-74. Tuesday (Sept. 27) results—Georgetown def. Connally, 15-4; Cedar Park def. Bastrop. 17-2; Rouse def. Cedar Creek, 18-1; Hutto def. Elgin, 11-8.
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TUESDAY (SEPT. 27) 19-5A MATCH GEORGETOWN 15, CONNALLY 4 At Minzenmayer Tennis Center Boys doubles (3-0)—Ben Fischer-Core O'Banon, GHS, def. PhamHuynh, 6-4, 6-3; Alex Watson-Parker Kallman, GHS, def. Cao-Le, 6-3, 6-0; Cole Isbell-Stephen Sieckmann, GHS, def. Nguyen-Vu, 6-0, 6-3. Girls doubles (3-0)—Lena ArndtSam Clark, GHS, def. Lovato-Luong, 6-4, 6-2; Rachel Maloy-Rachel Strait, GHS, def. Nguyen-Nguyen, 6-1, 56-3; Tori Watkins-Timberly Abell, GHS, 6-0, 6-1. Mixed doubles (1-0)—Philip LloydElise Flachs, GHS, def. Whitely-Poole, 6-4, 6-1. Boys singles (4-2)—Pham, PC, def. Fischer, 7-5, 6-4; O'Banon, GHS, def. Cao, 6-2, 6-3; Kallman, GHS, def. Huynh, 3-6, 6-3 (4); Sieckmann, GHS, def. Whitely, 6-2, 6-4; Nguyen, PC, def. Drew Arnold, 6-1, 6-3; Nathan Greenhaw, GHS, def. Vu, 6-0, 6-3. Girls singles (4-2)—Lovato, PC, def. Arndt, 6-0, 6-0; Maloy, GHS, def. Nguyen, 6-1, 6-0; Clark, GHS, def. Poole, 6-0, 6-2; Strait, GHS, def. Nguyen, 6-0, 6-3; Watkins, GHS, def. L. Wong, 6-1, 6-1; Wong, PC, def. Sarah Fischer, 6-2, 3-6 (9). GHS season record: 16-4.
FRIDAY'S 19-5A MATCHES GEORGETOWN 18, ROUSE 1 At Minzenmayer Tennis Center Boys doubles (2-1)—Utter-Brown, R, def. B. Fischer-O'Banon, 7-5, 2-6 (8); Kallman-Watson, GHS, def. Patel-Wilhite, 6-0, 6-0; Arnold-Sieckmann, GHS, def. Alexander-Crowely, 6-0, 6-1. Girls doubles (3-0)—Arndt-Clark, GHS, def. Ford-Weems, 6-1, 6-0; Maloy-Strait, GHS, def. Basinger-Jung, 6-0, 6-0; Abel-Watkins, GHS, def. Plant-Flug, 6-0, 6-2. Mixed doubles (1-0)—Lloyd-Flachs, GHS, def. Dalman-McKinnon, 6-2, 6-2. Boys singles (6-0)—B. Fischer, GHS, def. Utter, 6-4, 6-4; O'Babnon, GHS, def. Brown, 6-3, 6-2; Kallman, GHS, def, Patel, 6-2, 6-0; Sieckmann, GHS, def. Dalman, 6-1, 6-2; Arnold, GHS, def. Wilhite, 6-4, 6-0; Watson, GHS, def. Crowely, 6-1, 6-2. Girls singles (6-0)—Arndt, GHS, def. McKinnon, 6-0, 6-0; Maly, GHS, def. Ford, 6-0, 6-0; Clark, GHS, def. Weems, 6-0, 6-1; Strait, GHS, def. Basinger, 6-0, 6-0; S. Flachs, GHS, def. Jung, 6-0, 6-1; S. S. Fischer, GHS, def. Plant, 6-0, 6-1. GHS season record: 17-4. CEDAR PARK 13, EAST VIEW 6 At Patriot Tennis Center Boys doubles (1-2)—Lee-Maciborski, CP, def. Strandboge-Martin, 6-3, 6-2; Thurman-Perry, EV, def. Sweeney-Kumar, 7-6 (2), 6-4; Larrea-Bailey, CP, def. Rollo-Huck, 6-3, 6-2. Girls doubles (1-2)—Namee-Kainer, EV, def. Keerthipeti-Bonselkl, 6-0, 6-2; Kelly-Adkins, CP, def. Foster-Burris, 6-3, 6-1; Radosauljevic-Gutierrez, CP, def. Piseno-Flores, 5-7, 6-4, 7-6. Mixed doubles (0-1)—Johnson-Ramsey, CP, def. Durham-Compton, 6-0, 6-1. Boys singles (2-4)—Lee, CP, def. Strandboge, 2-6, 7-6 (4), (10); Thurman, EV, def. Johnson, 4-6, 6-2, 10-2; Martin, EV, def. Larrea, 1-6, 6-4, 10-7; Maciborski, CP, def. Perry, 6-3, 6-0; Sweeney, CP, def. Rollo, 6-2, 6-1; Kumar, CP, def. Huck, 6-1, 6-1. Girls singles (2-4)—Namee, EV, def. Ramsey, 6-4, 6-1; Kelley, CP, def. Kainer, 6-2, 7-5; Keerthipeti, CP, def. Dunham, 6-2, 6-1; Adkins, CP, def. Burris, 6-1, 7-6 (3); Piseno, EV, def. Bonsell, 6-2, 6-0; Radosauljevic, CP, def. Flores, 6-1, 6-3. EV season record: 5-8. Source: GHS Tennis, EV Tennis
TUESDAY (SEPT. 27) NON-DISTRICT MATCH PFLUGERVILLE 13, EAST VIEW 10 At Pflugerville (PHS players names not available) Boys doubles (1-3) --Dane Strandboge-Travis Martin lost, 6-2, 6-7 (5), 15-13; Blake Thurman-Cole Perry, won, 6-4, 4-6, 10-4; Bryce BuckLuke Bratloff lost, 6-2, 6-2; Thomas Knightstep-Lucas Rollo lost, 8-2. Girls doubles (2-2)—Alex Yeager-Courtney Burris won, 6-0, 6-2; Sophia Namee-Tori Kainer won, 7-6 (1), 7-6 (0); Aria Piseno-Maria Flores lost 7-6 (9), 4-6, 10-8; Jessie Foster-Addie Dunham lost, 8-5.
GISD Sub-Varsity Football
Corinne Novak and the Patriots went 1-1 last week with a win against Bastrop and a loss to Georgetown. Photo by Russell Rinn. ‘Paso Eastlake. 21. Denton. 22. Victoria West. 23. Grapevine. 24. Justin Northwest. 25. Granbury. Honorable Mention—El Paso
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Mixed doubles (0-1)—Afton Compton-Jessica Halter lost, 6-3, 6-1. Boys singles (1-6) 0-- Thurman lost, 8-0; Standboge won, 9-7; Martin lost, 9-8 (6-3); Perry lost, 8-1; Huck lost, 8-1; Bratloff lost, 8-3; Knightslip lost, 8-0. Girls singles (6-1)—Yeager won,m 8-0; Namee won, 8-2; Kainer won, 8-2; Burris won, 9-7; Halter lost, 8-5; Piseno won, 8-1; Dunham won, 8-3. EV season record: 5-7.
Bye: East View. Friday's results—Georgetown def. Rouse, 18-1; Cedar Park def. East View, 13-6. Saturday's results—Bastrop def. Cedar Creek, 11-8; Connally def. Hutto at Connally, 19-0. Bye—Elgin. Tuesday's matches—Cedar Creek at Georgetown, Minzenmayer Tennis Center, 4 p.m.; Connally at East View, Patriot Tennis Center, 4 p.m.; Bastrop at Elgin, 4 p.m.; Hutto at Cedar Park, 4 p.m. Bye: Rouse. Friday's matches—Rouse at East View, 4 p.m.; Georgetown at Cedar Park, 4 p.m.. Saturday's matches—Bastrop at Pflugerville Connally, 9:30 a.m.; Elgin at Cedar Creek, 9:30 a.m. Bye: Hutto. Tuesday (Oct. 11) matches—Bastrop at East View, 4 p.m.; Georgetown at Hutto, 4 p.m.; Connally at Cedar Creek, 4 p.m.; Rouse at Elgin, 4 p.m. Bye: Cedar Park.
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JUNIOR VARSITY GEORGETOWN SILVER 49, EAST VIEW 6 GHS—Cooper Bell connected on two touchdown passes to Wyatt Childress and one to Noah Drum. Wyatt Childress also threw a TD to Drum. Giovani Beltran and Jared Pierce both had a rushing touchdown. "The offense played great," coach Richard Beaty said. "Nick Petter blocked well all night and had a long run in the fourth quarter. The offensive line did a great job protecting Bell as well as opening up lanes for the running backs. "The defense shut East View’s offense down all night. Tyler Knowles played a great game at defensive tackle, and returned a blocked punt for a touchdown. Mason Meyer also played well on the D-Line, as well as Gage Leggett and Noah Thompson in the secondary.
EV—The Patriots scored on a 65-yard pass from Carlos Ochoa to AJ Mays. Offensive MVP—Mays. Defensive MVP—Isiah Knight. Special teams MVP—Tyler Lambert ROUND ROCK CEDAR RIDGE SOPHOMORES 36, GHS BLUE 20—"We came out and did a great job competing early," coach Nathaniel Funk said. "We were actually winning 20-14 at the half, but they wore us down with a combination of depth and mistakes that we made. We lost our composure and they ended up winning. . . . The wide receivers and quarterbacks played well." GHS scoring --Jackson Sioson, 9-yard touchdown pass to Matt Johnson (Ryan McGann kick); Sioson, 70-yard run; Sioson, 3-yard run (Xavier Torres run). FRESHMAN GAMES GHS BLUE 28, EAST VIEW NAVY 21 GHS—"The Blue team was down
early 14-0 but roared back with 28 straight points," coach Jarrell Flores said. "The defense got a huge late interception from Hank Harris as the offense was powered by two touchdown runs from Roland Moreno to go along with touchdown passes from Jacob Ramos and Jackson Tingley. Both quarterbacks found Seth Basey for their respective touchdowns on the way to victory." GHS WHITE 30, EAST VIEW NAVY 0 GHS— "The White got off to a hot start with Chris Martinez throwing a halfback pass on the first play the Eagles had the ball to Isaiah Fillmore," Flores said. "Quarterback Brayden Wilson threw two touchdown passes to Dillon Bradley and Isaiah Fillmore with a Luke Clark touchdown run sandwiched in between—all in the first half. Chase Nations led a fierce Eagles defense that pitched a 30-0 shutdown over the crosstown rivals."
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EV FROM PAGE B1 The Cougars are led by senior quarterback Robert Patterson, who has produced 1,222 yards—397 on the ground and 825 in the air. That's an average of 6.94 yards per snap. Connally is sixth in the district in total offense with an average of 350 yards a game, but is third in team defense with an average yield of 284.8 yards a game. It will be facing an East View attack that has produced 445.7 yards a game and owns the district two leading rushers in sophomore Zion Hester (86-690, 8.02) and junior Torrie Davis (52-467, 8.98). Patriots’ senior quarterback Cameron Nowell is fourth in the district in passing with 1,139 yards. In the two previous meetings, the two schools split victories—Connally won 57-0 in 2012 and East View prevailed 56-35 in 2013. In the Georgetown game, the Patriots allowed the Eagles to score on their first seven possessions and eight of the first nine times they touched the ball. East View did tighten the score right before half on an 11-yard strike from Nowell (27 of 45 for 262 yards) to senior wide receiver Mason Klinger but had already given up 42 points in the first 24 minutes of play. Nowell’s set a school record for passes attempted in a single game. The Eagles led 42-15 at the half. With regard to the defense, Davies was bluntly objective, “They (Georgetown) have a good offense," he said. "They did a great job of taking advantage of some physical mismatches that made us look bad. We were in position to stop them multiple times, but they simply ran right through us. They are big,
19-5A: The Road Ahead
East View sophomore running back Zion Hester tries to fight off Georgetown’s Brandon Hawkins with a straight arm during last Friday’s District 19-5A game in Georgetown. Hester had 96 yards of total offense in the game and scored once. Photo by Russell Rinn.
EV vs. Connally Comparison DISTRICT 19-5A GAME At 7:30 p.m. Friday, GISD Athletic Complex SEASONS TO DATE
DEFENSE (Per game average) Column PC EV Points allowed 24.4 34.7 Yards rushing 147.6 186.3 Yards passing 137.2 172.3 Total defense 284.8 358.7 INDIVIDUAL LEADERES Rushing PC—Robert Patterson, 82-397; Ryan Walton 41-333. EV—Zion Hester 86-690; Torrie Davis, 52-467. Passing PC—Patterson, 57-94-4, 825 (12 TDs). EV—Cameron Nowell, 95159-4, 1,139 (11 TDs). Receiving PC—Earnest Musue, 12-143. EV— Marcus Maldonado, 27-346. Punting PC—Jordi Flores, 26-26.31. EV— Tyler Galloway, 22-33.09. Kick scoring PC—Flores, 14 EPs, 1 FG—17 points; Mauricio Gonzalez, 10 EPs, 0 FG—10 points
East View (2-4, 1-3) GHS—Opponent Opp. 18—Buda Hays 26 35—W. University 28 40—Rouse 65 20—Cedar Park 35 46—Cedar Creek 0 29—Georgetown 56 CONNALLY (3-0, 5-0) CON—Opponent Opp. 45—Lockhart 34 41—Del Valle 23 35—Hutto 30 28—Elgin 14 42—Bastrop 21 TEAM STATISTICS OFFENSE (Per game average) Column PC EV Points scored 38.2 31.0 Yards rushing 184.2 255.8 Yards passing 165.8 189.8 Total offense 350.0 445.7
Source: Advocate sports, 19-5A statistics.
strong and well-coached. “Our schemes were okay as far as putting our kids in position. I didn’t think we competed defensively as well as we could have in
the first half, but did much better after intermission. We were in position but just didn’t execute the stop.” Bright spots for the Patriots were few and far be-
tween. Sophomore runner Zion Hester who has been torching 19-5A defenses so far this year was held to 96 yards of total offense (1241 rushing, 6-55 receiving). Hester scored the Patriots' first touchdown midway through the opening period on an 18-yard scamper, but curiously only touched the ball only three times in the second half. Torrie Davis returned from a leg injury and contributed a respectable 36 yards on nine carries and had two catches for 29 yards. He also barreled over the goal line twice for twopoint conversions. Klinger, returning from knee surgery, saw his first action of the season and caught four balls, including the 11 yarder with only 0:07 showing before halftime. Junior receivers Marcus Maldonado (7-77) and Donald Walton (5-63) both had solid games. Nowell continued to improve. He had 42 yards scrambling on eight attempts in addition to completing 27 passes for 262 yards. Nowell did throw two interceptions and missed on a throw from his own 7-yard line to a wide-open Issac Ochoa that likely would have added 93 more yards and another score to his totals. Ironically, in this losing effort, the Patriots had 15 more yards in total offense than did the Eagles; they just didn’t cross the goal line very often.
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A critical look at the District 195A football race: SHOO-IN CEDAR PARK (5-0, 3-0)—The defending state champions stand No. 1 in The Associated Press 5A Poll and fourth in both The Old Coach and Texas Football rankings. . . . Defense is the prime calling card for the Timberwolves, who have allowed just 33 points in five starts and 146.0 yards a game. CP has shut out Vandegrift, Bastrop and Rouse. Twenty of the points yielded by the T-Wolves were to East View in a 35-20 win. The offense isn't bad, averaging 30.4 points and 416.8 yards a game. The Timberwolves are riding a 21-game victory streak. The remaining schedule: Oct. 7—Cedar Creek. 14—at Georgetown. 21—Pflugerville Connally. 28—at Hutto. Nov. 4—Elgin. THE PRIME CONTENDERS GEORGETOWN (6-0, 4-0) — Conventional wisdom says that a 5-3 record will guarantee a playoff spot and with last-place Bastrop Cedar Creek (1-5, 0-4) still to play another win seems virtually assured, but the other three games are against the current cream of the district crop—Rouse, Cedar Park and Pflugerville Connally. Possible injuries to key offensive performers could be a problem, if they strike. The Eagles have shown a very efficient passing attack, but in its first three district starts had trouble stopping standout running backs. The remaining schedule: Oct. 7—at Rouse. Oct. 14—Cedar Park. 21—at Bastrop Cedar Creek. Oct. 28—Open date. Nov. 4—Pflugerville Connally. PFLUGERVILLE CONNALLY (5-0, 3-0)—The Cougars are the surprise team in the district after being picked sixth in preseason assessments by Texas Football and The Old Coach. The schedule is somewhat questionable, but Hutto, 35-30, and Elgin, 28-14, were quality opponents. Hutto pushed Georgetown into overtime. Cougars look strong on defense with an average yield of 284.8 yards and a big playmaker in quarterback Robert Patterson. The big hurdle is the schedule with games against Rouse, Cedar Park and Georgetown. The remaining schedule: Oct. 7—at East View. 14—Rouse. 21—at Cedar Park. 28—Cedar Creek. Nov. 4—at Georgetown. ROUSE (3-2, 2-1)—A preseason playoff pick that owes its losses to quality opponents Round Rock Westwood, 52-38 and Cedar Park, 31-0. The Raiders, who prefer being the bull in the china shop, still have big tests in Georgetown, Connally and Hutto in a row. Rouse has produced about 3/5ths of its offense on the ground. Senior quarterback Michael Forester is a weapon, but the Raiders have a tendency to yield yardage—387.2 yards a game. The remaining schedule: Oct. 7—Georgetown. 14—at Connally. 21—Hutto. 28—at Elgin. Nov. 4—Bastrop. STILL WARM HUTTO (3-2, 1-2)—The Hippos have a strong offensive group and rolled over Bryan and Bryan Rudder, scoring 100 points, in non-district action, but have come up short in district games with Georgetown, 35-32, and Connally, 35-30. They have a win over Elgin, but face a tough five-game close in the nine-team district with Rouse and Cedar Park along with Bastrop, East View and Cedar Creek. Sophomore quarterback Chase Griffin
appears to be a player with a strong future. The remaining schedule: Oct. 7—at Bastrop. 14—East View. 21—at Rouse. 28—Cedar Park. Nov. 4—at Cedar Creek. HOPEFUL/SPOILER EAST VIEW (2-4, 1-3)—The Patriots already have Rouse, Cedar Park and Georgetown in their rearview mirror along with a win over Cedar Creek. Head coach Rob Davies' team has its back to the wall if the 5-3 theory applies, but he feels his team has the ability to sweep its final four games. That task includes backto-back games with Connally and Hutto along with potentially dangerous Elgin and Bastrop. The Wildcats and Bears could be tough opponents. East View may have the district's best 1-2 running punch in sophomore Zion Hester and junior Torrie Davis along with a more-thansolid performer at quarterback in Cameron Nowell. The remaining schedule: Oct. 7—Connally. 14—at Hutto. 21—Elgin. 28—at Bastrop. Nov. 4—Open date. IN A HOLE/SPOILERS ELGIN (1-5, 1-3)—A team with potential—especially on offense—that needs to sweep its final four games to have a solid shot at the playoffs. After beating Cedar Creek, the Wildcats have lost consecutive district starts Georgetown, Connally and Hutto. The non-district losses were to two quality opponents in Harker Heights and Brenham. The mountain for thre Wildcats is tall as they may have the toughest closeout with Rouse and Cedar Park. Defense looks like a liability as Elgin is coughing up 403.5 per start. The remaining schedule: Oct. 14—Bastrop. 21—at East View. 28—Rouse. Nov. 4—at Cedar Park. BASTROP (1-5, 1-3)—The Bears already have lost to Cedar Park, Georgetown and Connally and own a win over Bastrop ISD neighbor Cedar Creek. Games with Hutto, Elgin, East View and Rouse is going to make it tough for the Bears to run the table. The lack of offense has been a major problem for the Bears as they average only 18.8 points a game and 206.2 yards s game. Senior Jovahn Jones, a fast and strong runner, is one of the district's best weapons, if healthy. The remaining schedule: Oct. 7 --Hutto. 14—at Elgin. 28—East View. Nov. 4—at Rouse. OUT IN THE COLD BASTROP CEDAR CREEK (1-5, 0-4)—The Eagles only win was over winless 4A Division II Smithville, 28-26. CC has been outscored by its four district opponents 47.5 points a game to 5.5 points a game. The Eagles are eighth in the district in offense (215.2 yards a start) and ninth in defense (405.8 yards a game). Unfortunately, the Eagles close their schedule with four strong offenses, including Cedar Park and Georgetown. In its five season of football, Cedar Creek owns an 8-37 record. The remaining schedule: Oct. 7—at Cedar Park. 21—Georgetown. 28—at Connally. Nov. 4—Hutto. DISTRICT 20-5A The four playoff teams from 19-5A will play the four playoff representatives from 20-5A in bi-district. District 20-5A, an eight-team alignment, still has five playing dates with no real trends having developed. Brenham and Magnolia are both 2-0, but there are 20 games still to play. —Galen Wellnicki
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FOOTBALL OCTOBER 6, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
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East View’s Donald Walton is chased by Georgetown’s Paul Saucedo during Friday’s rivary matchup. Photo by Russell Rinn.
PAGE B7
Senior QB Chandler Herman avoids the Patriots Nate Hines on his way to the Eagles first score of the night. Photo by Russell Rinn.
GHS FROM PAGE B1 Raiders were shut out by defending state champion Cedar Park, 31-0, but have put 65 and 58 points on the board in their wins over East View and Cedar Creek. "They are a physically imposing team," Dean said. "They're bigger up front on defense than anyone we've played. They have big strong kids throughout their lineup. Their quarterback (senior Michael Forester) is 6-6 and they have three 6-2 wide receivers. "They want to pound the ball from several different formations and then try to catch you with a play-action pass. "(Defensively) they run a 3-4 like our last two opponents, but don't apply as much pressure as East View." Asked what the Eagles need to do to be successful, Dean answered, "Run the football effectively, take what the defense gives us, protect the football and cause some turnovers." Against East View, GHS took a 21-8 lead in the first
quarter. Herman capped a five-play 46-yard drive with a 2-yard run with eight minutes and 19 seconds remaining in the first period and Diaz kicked his first of eight extra points. Hester put East View ahead momentarily with runs of 19 and 18 yards to cap a 65-yard push, and junior Torrie Davis, returning from injury, powered in for the two-pointer. GHS finished the period with an 8-yard scoring run by Leggett and a 49-yard pass from Herman to Corrales. The Eagles scored the initial three touchdowns in the second period—a 16-yard pass from Herman to Corrales, a 9-yard run by junior Erik Anderson, and a 17-pass from Herman to Leggett. The Patriots closed the gap to 42-15 with seven seconds left in the first half as Nowell completed an 11yard pass to Mason Klinger, who also was coming off the injured list. Reed Honshtein added the extra point. Georgetown outscored
GHS vs. Rouse Comparison DISTRICT 19-5A GAME At 7:30 p.m. Friday, Bible Stadium, Leander GHS (6-0, 4-0) GHS—Opponent Opp. 49—FW Brewer 28 40—Buda Hays 17 35—Hutto 32 62—Elgin 20 41—Bastrop 25 56—East View 29 ROUSE (3-2, 2-1) ROU—Opponent Opp. 44—Manor 21 38—RR Westwood 52 65—East View 40 0 --Cedar Park 31 58—Cedar Creek 13 TEAM STATISTICS OFFENSE (Per game average) Column GHS ROU Points scored 47.2 41.0 Yards rushing 116.7 251.2 Yards passing 285.3 174.8 Total offense 402.5 426.0
East View, 14-6, in the third quarter as it sandwiched a 13-yard pass from Herman to Corrales and an 8-yard run by Anderson around a 1-yard run by Patriots junior Nate Hines. East View added the game's final touchdown on
DEFENSE (Per game average) Column GHS Points allowed 25.2 Yards rushing 186.3 Yards passing 186.7 Total defense 369.3
ROU 31.4 179.4 207.8 387.2
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing GHS—Erik Anderson, 43-241. ROU—Devin Tucker, 70-330. Passing GHS—Chandler Herman, 128-1882 1,700 (18 TDs). ROU—Michael Forester, 55-69-0 826 (10 TDs). Receiving GHS—Beau Corrales, 57-768; Caden Leggett, 30-500. ROU—Chance Cooper, 34-509. Punting GHS—Luiz Diaz, 14-37.29. ROU— Forester 16-43.06. Kick scoring GHS—Diaz, 27 EPs, 8 FGs—51 points. ROU—Jacob Zepada, 21 EPs,3 FGs—30 points. Source: 19-5A statistics.
a 10-yard pass from Nowell to Donald Walton with 21 seconds left to play. The victory gave GHS a 4-1 edge in the all-time series before a large crowd. East View made the only two turnovers of the game as Eagles defensive backs
Tryin Stone and Trace Glanville picked off passes. Numerous penalties hampered both teams at times and the Patriots suffered from three of five punts that went for 16 yards or less. After viewing the video, Dean pointed to senior defensive lineman Kadin Hammonds, who moved back to the offense line where he played last year because of injury; Anderson, Corrales, defensive lineman Tavion Smith (seven stops, two for losses), junior middle linebacker Kyle Urbanovsky (10 tackles), Stone, Herman, Glanville and Diaz as having strong performances. THE OLD COACH CLASS 5A TOP 25 1. Denton Ryan (6-0). 2. Manvel (5-0). 3. Aledo (6-0). 4. Cedar Park (5-0). 5. Richmond Foster (5-0). 6. Lancaster (4-1). 7. College Station (6-0). 8. Waxahachie (5-0). 9. Georgetown (6-0). 10. Highland Park (4-1). 11. Frisco Lone Star (4-1). 12. Corpus Christi Calallen (4-1). 13. Texarkana Texas (5-0). 14. Temple (4-2). 15. Colleyville Heritage (3-2). 16. Lubbock Cooper (4-0). 17. Angleton (5-1). 18. Boerne Champion (4-1). 19. Mansfield Legacy (3-2). 20. Dripping Springs (5-0). 21. College
Station A&M Consolidated (3-2). 22. Grapevine (5-0). 23. Port Neches-Groves (5-0). 24. Mesquite Poteet (3-2). 25. Lubbock Monterey (4-0). TEXAS FOOTBALL 5A TOP 25 1. Manvel (5-0). 2. Denton Ryan (6-0). 3. Aledo (5-0). 4. Cedar Park (5-0). 5. Richmond Foster (5-0). 6. College Station (5-0). 7. Lancaster (4-1). 8. Waxahachie (5-0). 9. Corpus Christi Calallen (4-1). 10. Frisco Lone Star (4-1). 11. Temple (4-2). 12. Highland Park (4-1). 13. Georgetown (6-0). 14. Mansfield Lake Ridge (3-2). 15. Texarkana Texas (5-0). 16. Colleyville Heritage (3-2). 17. Mesquite Poteet (3-2). 18. College Station A&M Consolidated (3-2). 19. Angleton (5-1). 20. Wylie East (3-2). 21. Boerne Champion (4-1). 22. Port Neches-Groves (5-0). 23. Lubbock Cooper (4-0). 24. Grapevine (5-0). 25. Crosby (3-2). THE ASSOCIATE PRESS 5A STATE POLL (First-place votes in parenthesis) Pl.—School Points 1. Cedar Park (12) (5-0) 228 2. Aledo (6) (5-0) 225 3. Denton Ryan (3) (6-0) 200 4. Manvel (4) (5-0) 195 5. Richmond Foster (5-0) 138 6. Waxahachie (5-0) 109 7. Lancaster (4-1) 79 8. Texarkana Texas (5-0) 70 9. College Station (6-0) 57 10. Frisco Lone Star (4-1) 25 Others receiving votes: 11, Grapevine 14. 12, Georgetown 8. 12, Dallas Highland Park 8. 12, Lubbock Cooper 8. 15, Port Arthur Memorial 3. 15, Port Neches-Groves 3. 17, Northwest 2. 18, Denton 1. 18, CC Calallen 1. 18, Dripping Springs 1.
District 19-5A Football Race At A Glance DISTRICT 19-5A FOOTBALL RACE District Season Team W L W L Pts. Opp. Georgetown 4 0 6 0 286 151 Cedar Park 3 0 5 0 152 33 P. Connally 3 0 5 0 191 122 Rouse 2 1 3 2 210 157 Hutto 1 2 3 2 199 132 Bastrop 1 3 1 5 113 200 East View 1 3 2 4 188 210 Elgin 1 3 1 5 145 183 B. Cedar Creek 0 4 1 5 64 257 Friday's results—Georgetown 56, East View 29; Pflugerville Connally 42, Bastrop 21; Connally Stadium, 7:30 p.m.; Hutto 37, Elgin 34; Rouse 58, Bastrop Cedar Creek 13. This Friday's games—Pflugerville Connally at East View, GISD Athletic Complex, 7:30 p.m.; Georgetown at Rouse, Bible Stadium, 7:30 p.m.;
Cedar Creek at Cedar Park, Gupton Stadium, 7:30 p.m.; Hutto at Bastrop, Bastrop Memorial Stadium, 7:30 p.m. Bye: Elgin. DISTRICT 20-5A AT A GLANCE (Note: Top four teams in 19-5A play 20-5A teams in bi-district) Standings—Brenham, 2-0, 4-1; Magnolia, 2-0, 4-1; Huntsville, 1-1, 2-3; Magnolia West, 1-1, 4-1; Tomball Memorial, 1-1, 4-1; Willis, 1-1, 4-1; Tomball, 0-2, 2-3; Waller, 0-2, 1-4. Friday's results—Brenham 42, Waller 25; Magnolia West 21, Tomball Memorial 14; Magnolia 75, Tomball 54; Huntsville 27, Willis 14. This Friday's games—Brenham at Tomball Memorial, 7:30 p.m.; Tomball at Waller, 7:30 p.m.; Magnolia West at Willis, 7:30 p.m.; Huntsville at Magnolia, 7:30 p.m.
FRIDAY'S DISTRICT 19-5A GAMES GEORGETOWN 56, EAST VIEW 29 At GISD Athletic Complex East View 8 7 6 8—29 Georgetown 21 21 14 0—56 GHS—Chandler Herman, 2 run (Luiz Diaz kick), 8:19 first (5 players, 46 yards) EV—Zion Hester, 18 run (Torrie Davis run), 5:45 first (7 plays, 63 yards) GHS—Caden Leggett, 8 run (Diaz kick), 3:12 first (7 plays, 76 yards) GHS—Beau Corrales, 49 pass from Herman (Diaz kick), 0:51 first (1 play, 49 yards) GHS—Corrales, 16 pass from Herman (Diaz kick), 9:44 second (5 plays, 48 yards) GHS—Erik Anderson, 9 run (Diaz kick), 4:55 second (8 plays, 59 yards) GHS—Leggett, 19 pass from Herman
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(Diaz kick), 1:50 second (two plays, 54 yards) EV—Mason Klinger, 11 pass from Nowell (Reed Honshtein kick), 0:07 second (8 plays, 77 yards) GHS—Corrales, 13 pass from Herman (Diaz kick), 10:43 third (6 plays, 59 yards) EV—Nate Hines, 1 run (run failed), 4:49 third (15 plays, 70 yards) GHS—Anderson, 8 run (Diaz Kick), 2:47 third (1 run, 8 yards) EV—Donald Walton, 10 pass from Nowell (Davis run), 0:21 fourth (15 plays, 78 yards) TEAM STATISTICS Column EV GHS First downs 27 25 Yards rushing 35-140 22-120 Yards passing 262 267 Passes 27-45-2 23-30-0
Total offense Avg. per play Fumbles lost Penalties Punts
80-402 52-387 5.03 7.25 0-0 0-1 10-80 8-120 5-19.8 3-33.0
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing EV—Hester 12-42, Nowell 7-38, Davis 9-36, Hines 6-23, Isaac Ochoa 1-1. GHS—Anderson 12-75, Herman 6-25, Cole Posey 2-13, Leggett 1-8, Colton Knudsen 1-(-1). Passing EV—Nowell 27-45-2, 262. GHS— Herman 23-30-0, 267. Receiving EV—Marcus Maldonado 7-77, Hester 6-55, Walton 5-63, Mason Klinger 4-24, Davis 2-29, Ochoa 2-14, Jake Brown 1-0. GHS—Corrales 11-165,
Leggett 7-59, Kundsen 4-29, Nic Crombie 1-14. LONGEST PLAYS FROM SCRIMMAGE EV—21 yards, Nowell pass to Hester. GHS—49 yards, Herman pass to Corrales. GHS-EAST VIEW ALL-TIME SERIES (GHS leads, 4-1) Year—Winner Score 2012—Georgetown 48-7 2013—Georgetown 35-28 2014—East View 45-42 2015—Georgetown 59-27 2016—Georgetown 56-29
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