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High School Sports
CLASS 1A QUARTERFINAL: LENA-WINSLOW 52, FULTON 14
Fulton falls to Lena-Winslow in 1 A quarter final
By DAN WOESSNER For Shaw Media
If the Lena-Winslow Panthers were a team appearing in a video game, their difficulty rating would be ridiculous.
The Fulton Steamers knew that well heading into Saturday’s Class 1A quarterfinal matchup in Fulton, but knowing it and being able to do anything about it are two very different things.
The Steamers couldn’t find the right combination of buttons to push on enough plays, and the Panthers made them pay with Madden-like explosive plays in a 52-14 win.
Lena Winslow (12-0) advances to meet Forreston in the 1A semifinals. It will be the third time the two programs have met in the semifinals since 2017.
“They are just so good, so very good,” Fulton coach Patrick Lower said. “You have to play perfect and you have to rely on them to make a couple mistakes. I think they made one mistake in the first half and we didn’t capitalize on it.
“You’d like to say that we just didn’t play well, but they had a lot to do with that. They are good and you have to be perfect and we weren’t perfect by any means. They’re the better team and they’re moving on.”
The Steamers (9-3) received the opening kickoff and momentarily m o v e d t h e b a l l a s q u a r te r b a c k B r a y d e n D y k s t r a c o n n e c t e d w i t h Ethan Price on a 12-yard pass on the second play of the game. The drive stalled after that and a fourth-down punt went straight out of bounds on the Lena-Winslow sideline.
The Panthers took over on the Fulton 42 and after a 2-yard gain by Gunar Lobdell, Jake Zeal burst into the open for a 40-yard touchdown. It was the first of six offensive plays of more than 40 yards for Lena-Winslow.
The Steamers were forced to punt again after three plays, and this time, Lobdell fielded the punt at the Fulton 40 and returned it 34 yards, setting the Panthers up with first-and-goal from the six. Zeal did the rest, scoring on the first play on a 6-yard run to put LenaWinslow up 14-0 with six minutes left in the first quarter.
“It was really devastating,” Fulton senior Ryan Eads said. “It was like ‘Wow!’ and it was 14-0 right away. We can’t come out like that.
“They are just a really, really good football team. I think we played a little bit scared today and they got the best of us.”
The second quarter became the Lobdell show as his touchdown runs of 57 and 45 yards put Lena-Winslow firmly ahead at 30-0 with 6:42 left to play in the half.
“They are just so fundamentally sound in everything they do,” Lower said. “It’s nothing that is fancy or tough to figure out. That’s the part that’s frustrating. Uou know what’s coming.”
Fulton answered the second Lobdell touchdown with its first successful drive. The big play was a 57-yard pass from Dykstra to Price. The completion put Fulton in the red zone at the Panthers 12. Another pass to Price put Fulton at the 5 and after a 4-yard run by Eads, Joel Ford scored from the 1-yard line.
The Steamers then forced a threeand-out and a shanked punt gave them g r e a t f i e l d p o s i t i o n a t t h e L e n a Winslow 32. But after a 4-yard run by Dykstra, the Steamers failed to move the ball with three straight incompletions. The last incompletion drew the ire of the Steamers crowd, which wanted an interference call on a pass to Kole Schipper.
On the third play of the next drive, Zeal went around the end 60 yards for a touchdown. The Panthers added one more score on a 41-yard touchdown pass to Zeal from Drew Streckwald as time expired in the fist half. Le-Win went into the break leading 44-7.
Lena-Winslow kept rolling after the half as Gage Dunker rumbled 56 yards on the first play to put the Panthers at the Fulton 15. Le-Win crossed the 4 0 - p o i n t r u n n i n g - c l o c k b a r r i er moments later when Streckwald hit Jace Flynn for a 15-yard touchdown pass.
Fulton followed with a six-play, 63-yard touchdown drive capped by a 2-yard touchdown run by Eads.
It was the second straight quarterfinal appearance for the Steamers in their second season in the NUIC after leaving the Three Rivers. All four quarterfinal teams in the northern half of the 1A bracket were from the NUIC.
“I think since coming to the NUIC we have enjoyed some great success,” Eads said. “We’ve definitely gotten better over the last two seasons. This conference is really great and definitely makes us better.”
Photos by Alex T. Paschal - apaschal@shawmedia.com ABOVE: Fulton’s Lukas Schroeder is hauled down in the backfield Saturday in a 1A quarterfinal game against Lena-Winslow. BELOW: Fulton’s Conner Sheridan and Baylen Damhoff (right) stop a Le/Win player Saturday in a quarterfinal game.
FULTON HIGH SCHOOL
Introducing FHS junior B.L .I.N.D. leader Nicole Griff ith
What are you involved in at Fulton High School?
At Fulton High School, I am part of B.L.I.N.D. I also run the Central Bank Steamer Suite as the only Independent Business student FHS has currently. I’m also vice president of the junior class as a class officer.
W h a t a r e y o u r h o b b i e s o u t s i d e o f school?
Outside of school, I love to work and serve my community any way I can. I’m currently employed at Brunch House and Subway and enjoy seeing m e m b e r s o f o u r c o m m u ni ty f re quently.
How would you describe your leadership style?
I would consider myself to be a transformational leader. I have a loud, powerful voice that I choose to use to the best of my abilities. Some ways that I lead include taking control, communicating well and managing the vision created. All of which are characteristics o f a tra n sf or ma ti ona l le ad er. Everything I involve myself in I have a strong passion for and everyone knows this in the way I dedicate myself.
What has B.L.I.N.D. meant to you?
B.L.I.N.D. has meant more to me than I could ever put into words. B.L.I.N.D. has allowed me to express my love of building relationships with not only my family members and my classmates, but also my teachers and my coaches. I love helping and healing others, and B.L.I.N.D. is the perfect opportunity to do both things for freshmen who are experiencing a more challenging time of life.
Words of advice?
My words of advice would be that rock bottom teaches you lessons that mountain tops never will. In fact, most lessons are learned when you keep trying, even when there seems to be no hope at all! Nicole Griffith, Fulton High School B.L.I.N.D. leader
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