Central Region | Archive | November, 2008

Region goes 1 for 2

STATE FOOTBALL PLAYOFFS
DIVISION 5 SEMIFINALS

Dinwiddie 42, Liberty-Bealeton 21
* Adam Morgan accounted for five TDs, and a turnover-hungry Generals defense ravaged Liberty to advance to Saturday’s state final in Blacksburg at Virginia Tech.
The Generals will face Phoebus. The Eastern Region power devoured Stone Bridge 38-8.

DIVISION 6 SEMIFINALS

Osbourn 47, Varina 28
* Osbourn continues its dream run, ending yet another undefeated team’s season.
Oscar Smith 10, Oakton 7

AAA State Finals at Virginia Tech’s
Lane Stadium, Blacksburg

Saturday, December 6th, 2008
Division 5: Phoebus (13-0) vs. Dinwiddie
(12-1), 12 p.m.
Division 6: Osbourn
(9-4) vs. Oscar Smith (14-0), 4 p.m.

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Football: Saturday Scoreboard, AAA Semifinals

By Paul Frommelt
Prince William County Content Manager

pfrommelt@digitalsports.com

AAA Division 6

Northwest Champion Osbourn 47, Central Champion Varina 28
Osbourn (9-4), Varina (12-1)
DigitalSports Coverage
Game Notes: Osbourn beats its third consecutive undefeated team to advance the the Div. 6 final for the second time in three years. The Eagles overcome a 14-0 deficit early by scoring 14 unanswered points to end the half and 14 more at the start of the 3rd quarter. Osbourn’s Jerell McFadden scores four touchdowns on the ground and catches another in the victory. QB Thomas Keith rushes for a score and throws two more — including an 80-yard TD to Rodney Whitehead.

Eastern Champion Oscar Smith 10, Northern Champion Oakton 7
Oscar Smith (14-0), Oakton (13-1)
DigitalSports Coverage
Game Notes: Oscar Smith’s Ryan Trottman hits a 24-yard field goal with 1 minute, 27 seconds left in the game to lift Oscar Smith to the Div. 6 state finals. Oscar Smith quarterback Philip Sims completes 18-of-31 passes for 220 yards and a touchdown. Sims found Tim Smith eight times for 141 yards and a score.

AAA Division 5

Eastern Champion Phoebus 38,
Northern Champion Stone Bridge 8
Phoebus (14-0) vs. Stone Bridge (13-1)
DigitalSports Coverage
Game Notes: The Phantoms get a little revenge against the Bulldogs with a 30-point blowout at home. The Phantoms defense sacks Stone Bridge quarterback Patrick Thompson and forces a fumble on the Bulldogs’ first play from scrimmage and return the ball 26 yards for a score. The Phantoms pick off Stone Bridge Thompson five times in the game, including a third-quarter interception by LoVante Battle, who returned it 36 yards for a touchdown. Shawn Alston scores twice for the Phantoms, who will face Dinwiddie in the Div. 5 finals next Saturday.

Central Champion Dinwiddie 42, Northwest Champion Liberty-Bealeton 21
Dinwiddie (12-1), Liberty-Bealeton (10-3)
DigitalSports Coverage
Game Notes: Like the Cardinal District last year, the Cedar Run District nearly saw two teams advance to the AAA VHSL finals, but the Eagles were no match for Central champ Dinwiddie, who scores 40-plus points for the ninth time this season. The Generals have won their three playoff games by a combined score of 114-45. The Generals will take on undefeated Phoebus next Saturday.

AAA State Finals at Virginia Tech’s Lane Stadium, Blacksburg
Saturday, December 6th, 2008
Division 5: Phoebus (13-0) vs. Dinwiddie (12-1), 12 p.m.
Division 6: Osbourn (9-4) vs. Oscar Smith (14-0), 4 p.m.

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Playoff Football: Osbourn 47, Varina 28

DigitalSports coverage of the 2008 Metro Bowl is proudly brought to you by Dynamic Sports Performance in Northern Virginia.

DigitalSports FanShare: Click here send in your photos and videos from the game!

By Paul Frommelt

Prince William Content Manager

Click on the “Photos” and “Videos” links above to view over 300 pictures, 75 video highlights and four video interviews from the game.

Post Game Interviews: Jerell McFadden, Tyler Brown, Thomas and Timmy Keith, Former Osbourn QB Brandon Hogan

For the second time in three years, the Osbourn Eagles are heading to the state finals.

“We get to practice on Monday,” yelled the Eagles as fans rushed onto the field to congratulate their team after a 47-28 win over Central Region champion Varina in the VHSL Divison 6 semifinals.

Six weeks ago, it looked as if the Eagles might miss their second consecutive postseason after going 14-0 and winning a state title in 2006. Sitting at 3-4, the Eagles needed to win the remainder of their games to sneak into the Northwest Region tournament with the No. 4 seed. Coming close to ending their season in early November, the Eagles have taken nothing for granted these last three weeks. And so, practicing has become a privilege. Being able to suit up on Monday has become a reward.

“We are all believing in each other and believing in that commitment,” said Osbourn head coach Steve Schultze. “It is so special when something like this happens. It’s a dream come true for this to happen once. Now we are going back. That is what I am excited about.”

After vanquishing undefeated Battlefield and Woodbridge in the Northwest Region playoffs, the Eagles hosted the 12-0 Blue Devils on Saturday afternoon. Things didn’t look promising early.

In the first quarter, the Blue Devils got a 32-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Hermon Norrell to wide receiver Bobby Smith to get on the board. Senior T.K. Hester made in 14-0 at the end of the quarter with a 25-yard run.

Osbourn quarterback Thomas Keith, who finished the game with 221 yards passing helped the Eagles get back in the game in the second quarter with a 7-yard run with 8 minutes, 27 seconds left in the half. Keith then found Jerell McFadden for a 6-yard pass to knot the game at 14-14 heading into halftime.

At halftime, knowing that his squad will get the ball first, Schultze preached to his team to strike quickly.

“This drive, it’s time to take advantage of this team,” Schultze told his team. “Let them know that we are a much better team than they thought.”

The Eagles did just that as Keith found sophomore Rodney Whitehead for an 80-yard touchdown pass on the Eagles’ second play from scrimmage to take their first lead of the game. Osbourn’s lead lasted for the remainder of the game.

“We knew that we had this talent,” said Schultze. “The bottom line is that we kept believing in each other. We played good football. The bottom line is that you have to block, you have to tackle, you and to run, and you have to be able to throw and catch. That is what this game is about.”

For the third time in four games, McFadden rushed for over 100 yards — totaling 157 on 33 carries with four rushing touchdowns, all in the second half.

“It’s like a dream,” said McFadden. “Everything was just clicking.”

With their fans on the field looking on, Schultze gathered his squad. He raised his pointer finger in the air.

“Hey, we got one more.”

One more Monday practice. One more week. One more game.

The Osbourn Eagles will face Easter Region champion Oscar Smith (14-0) in the Division 6 VHSL title game at Lane Stadium on the campus of Virginia Tech next Saturday. Oscar Smith beat Oakton, 10-7, to advance to the final.

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Division 5 state semis: Defense steals show

by Stephen M. Lewis
DigitalSports Richmond
slewis@digitalsports.com

Dinwiddie and defense. The two words are not usually in the same sentence, but that needed to change in this report.

The Generals allowed 21 points, but registered five turnovers to lead Dinwiddie to a 42-21 victory over Liberty of Bealeton Saturday afternoon in the state Group AAA semifinals.

Dinwiddie’s docket is full of offensive juggernauts.

QB Adam Morgan. Receivers Sam Haskins, Jerrell White, Quintaze Jackson and Terron Adams could all be No. 1s on most other teams.

The offensive line hardly lets Morgan’s No. 7 jersey need a stain remover.

But it was Dinwiddie’s defense that erased any hope of the Northwest Region champion earning a chance at any state hardware.

On the game’s first play from scrimmage, Eagles QB Nick Potts tried to find Kenny Tapscott on a comeback route. The pigskin was a little high as Tapscott tipped it in the air.

Dinwiddie cornerback Brandon Parson was Johnny On The Spot, intercepting the pass to take 100 percent of the momentum.

Five plays later, Morgan hit Jerrell White on an easy crossing route for a TD. Chad Jones‘ booming extra-point made it 7-0.

The defense wasn’t close to being finished. The star of the unit was sophomore Corey Marshall.

On Liberty’s next possession, the 6-1, 250-pound defensive lineman picked off Potts as he was under extreme pressure. It would be one of three turnovers forced by Marshall.

“We have opportunities, we just have to capitalize on them when they come,” the well-spoken Marshall said. “It’s all about all three phases working together. It’s a team effort.”

It took only one play for Morgan (18 for 25, 235 yards, four TDs; 19 carries, 60 yards, TD) to cash in, finding Terron Adams from four yards out in the flat en route to a 14-0 advantage.

Liberty responded to tie the contest on a 15-yard scamper by U.Va.-bound Corey Lillard (14 carries, 109 yards) and a 74-yard toss-and-catch from Potts (8 for 16, 184 yards, three INTs, two TDs) to Derrick Lee (four catches, 126 yards, two TDs).

But it could’ve been worse.

The Eagles drove to Dinwiddie’s four-yard line down 14-0, only to have Parson take down Lee on a fourth-and-two play as he tried to convert on a reverse.

Dinwiddie’s offense couldn’t break the 14 knot, so Marshall did.

He grabbed Shaheem Jones in the backfield and ripped the ball from him, racing 32 yards to paydirt, his second TD of the season.

The play jumpstarted Dinwiddie’s potent attack. Morgan ripped off a 56-yard post pattern to Jackson (6 catches, 144 yards, TD) for a 28-14 advantage that Dinwiddie took into halftime.

Different half, same story.

Liberty trekked to Dinwiddie’s four-yard line again, only for Marshall to force and recover Ryan Burroughs‘ fumble.

You guessed it, Dinwiddie turned it into points.

A 10-play, 96-yard drive, keyed by a Morgan 63-yard bomb to Jackson, resulted in Mark Beville reaching paydirt for this score, a five-yard toss from Morgan.

“He’s a champion. He’s a warrior,” emotional Dinwiddie coach Billy Mills said of his stellar QB, who now owns the state’s passing records for completions, yardage and touchdowns. “Nobody deserved to be where he is right now more than Adam Morgan. I can’t be more proud of that kid.”

And how could you not be proud of Dinwiddie and the job Mills has done, changing the Generals from a team reaching short of the .500-mark each year from 2001-2006, to potentially a state champion.

Perhaps Marshall said it best.

“Stepping up on the big stage really, really makes you someone worth talking about.”

Liberty         7  7 0 7 – 21
Dinwiddie  14 14 7 7 – 42
D – White 7 pass from Morgan (Chad Jones kick)
D – Adams 4 pass from Morgan (Jones kick)
L – Lillard 15 run (Jordan Hunter kick)
L – Lee 74 pass from Potts (Hunter kick)
D – Marshall 32 fumble return (Jones kick)
D – Jackson 56 pass from Morgan (Jones kick)
D – Beville 5 pass from Morgan (Jones kick)
L – Lee 6 pass from Potts (Hunter kick)
D – Morgan 1 run (Jones kick)

RUSHING

Liberty – Lillard 14 carries, 109 yards, Damien Dodson 7-37, Potts 2-20, Ryan Burroughs 4-13, Shaheem Jones 2-12, Cortez Carter 2-11; Dinwiddie – Morgan 19-60, Beville 8-26, Hall 2-6

PASSING

Liberty – Potts 8 completions, 16 attempts, 3 interceptions, 184 yards; Dinwiddie – Morgan 18-25-0-235

RECEIVING

Liberty – Lee 4 receptions, 126 yards, Lillard 3-49, Kenny Tapscott 1-9; Dinwiddie – Jackson 6-144, White 5-27, Beville 3-25, Sam Haskins 2-19, Chris Hall 1-6, Terron Adams 1-4

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Football Playoff Preview: Osbourn vs. Varina, Day 5

By Paul Frommelt

Prince William Content Manager

pfrommelt@digitalsports.com

Out of 10 AAA Prince William County football teams, the Osbourn Eagles are the last team standing. During the week leading up to the Eagles’ AAA Div. 6 VHSL semifinal matchup against undefeated Varina, Prince William DigitalSports will provide daily articles previewing the big game.

Day 5: Straight From the Sidelines

You’ve seen the stats and the videos. You’ve heard what people covering the two teams have to say. Now, with the big game only one day away, you get to hear it straight from the coaches’ mouths.

Osbourn Eagles Head Coach Steve Shultze

On practice this week:
They’ve been good. The kids have been excited about the situation that they are in and they have been working hard. We’re definitely ready to go.

On Varina running back Tre Johson:
He is a really good football player. He is a fast and elusive runner. We have to stop the run. You have to be able to stop the run. He is the type of back that can break tackles as well as make people miss and go the distance.

On Varina wide receiver Bobby Smith:
We don’t have a 6-foot-5 corner but we have been getting better all year and our guys are excited about the challenge. He is their go-to guy… They are excited about the opportunity of going up against a really good wide receiver and quarterback.

On Osbourn’s schedule:
We played 12 games this year and ten of those games were against teams with playoff talent. We are seeing good teams, that’s why we got better each week. Week in and week out, we have been playing really good football teams.

On how long Osbourn celebrated its Northwest Region title:
We enjoyed it that night and then we drove down [to watch Varina play] Saturday. Of course, while I’m watching, I’m going, “Oh geez, look what we have to prepare for.” I enjoyed it that Friday night. Then it was time for preparation. Now you gear up. You stress about it, watch a ton of film and try and practice and put schemes in that are going to help your teams win.

On Osbourn’s season thus far:
We are open and up front with the kids. We talk about where we have been. We always thought that we are a playoff caliber team both this year and last year. Last year, it didn’t gel. We got into a losing streak and lost confidence. We started off the block not playing good football. We were inconsistent and didn’t stick together. It took us awhile until we were playing good ball.

This year, the same thing kind of happened. We were playing good football, but just not getting it done and also getting beat by some really good teams. We talk about how proud we are on not giving up on each other and not give up on the season. We were in a do-or-die situation from week six on. The kids have realized that we have something special going on.

We are playing for each other, playing for our town, playing for our high school. We have been talking about it, but we aren’t talking state championship. We’re trying to stay in the moment, but also trying to talk about how proud we are on where we came from.

Varina Head Coach Stu Brown

On Varina running back Tre Johnson:
He is very big time. He is one of the rare athletes that the USC’s and LSU’s want to know about. He is legitimate…. He has been everything to us… He is the real deal. He is the most explosive player that I’ve ever coached. We have had some good ones down here.

On Varina quarterback Hermon Norrell
Hermon just delivers a nice ball. He is a throwing quarterback. We don’t move him out of pocket very much… He can throw it.

On Varina’s undefeated season thus far:
We have been in some battles throughout the year. You take the last half of our season — we had to beat Hanover in the fourth quarter, we had to beat Highland Springs in the fourth quarter. We had to beat Hermitage in the fourth. Our kids have faced adversity and they have learned through adversity. One thing about this team, they’re going to play for 48 minutes. They are the best with their backs against the wall.

In four of the five games when they got down by a score, they responded the next series. It is just a tough group of kids. Our district was tougher this year and our schedule was tougher. This 12-0 was definitely earned. Of the 12 teams that we played, three of them had a losing record. They’re definitely battle-tested.

On penalties:

[Osbourn is] a typical Northern Virginia team. They don’t do a whole lot wrong. We’ve had 101 more penalties than they’ve had. They force you to beat yourself. Our team is very aggressive. Aggressive teams have the tendency to make a lot of mistakes. It’s not like we don’t work on these mistakes every day. We happen to have a lot of penalties.

On Osbourn’s Jerell McFadden:
His motor. The biggest thing that stood out to us is that he is nonstop. When he runs the ball, he runs it downhill. Don’t get me wrong, he has some moves. The biggest thing that stood out was his motor. He runs it hard. There’s no patience in his running game. He don’t need much of a crease, that’s for sure.

On Osbourn’s ability to play the spoiler:
That’s the first thing that we talked to them about. It’s something
that they take pride in, as well they should. It’s actually a very
impressive stat. They are going to get their fifth shot at an
undefeated team this weekend. We do make them aware of it. That’s one
of the things that good teams feed off of. Osbourn is playing good
football right now.

Osbourn will host Varina on Saturday at 1 p.m. Check back tomorrow for more on the the Eagles’ AAA Div. 6 VHSL semifinal game.
Previous: Day 1: How Varina Advanced, Day 2: Winning on Paper, Day 3: Talking Heads, Day 4: Highlight Reel

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Football Playoff Preview: Osbourn vs. Varina, Day 3

By Paul Frommelt

Prince William Content Manager

pfrommelt@digitalsports.com

Out of 10 AAA Prince William County football teams, the Osbourn Eagles are the last team standing. During the week leading up to the Eagles’ AAA Div. 6 VHSL semifinal matchup against undefeated Varina, Prince William DigitalSports will provide daily articles previewing the big game.

Day 3: Talking Heads

Prince William DigitalSports Content Manager Paul Frommelt talks with Richmond DigitalSports Senior Editor Stephen Lewis about the matchup pitting Osbourn and Varina.

Stephen Lewis: Varina has played exceptional on the season thus far. I think that the difference this season, than in past season — Varina has been good, but this season, they have been tested in the region. Sometimes, the Central Region is not as strong as some other regions. This year, maybe we aren’t as strong up top, but they only beat Hermitage by one point in the playoffs. Highland Springs was a tough district opponent and they won by three. They are a very good team, but they have also been battle tested. That showed up in the playoff wins.

Paul Frommelt: When I talked to coach [Stu] Brown, I mentioned the fact that sometimes undefeated teams, heading into the first round of state, they feel like they’ve beaten all comers and they’re confident and then they get surprised. Here, Varina has had those close games which is going to key. Did it knock them down to earth a little bit?

SL: Exactly. I think that it bodes very well for them. Like I said, in the past, Varina used to dominate, beating everyone by 50 points. This season was different. A lot of guys got experience playing in tight ballgames. They know when to come up with that big play to win the game. Clutch kicking from Cory ***. He is probably the best kicker in our area. The Highland Springs win was by his field goal. To have wins like that, it builds character and it should bode well for them in the state playoffs.

PF: Have you seen what Osbourn has been doing?

SL: Yeah, I’m just looking at the stats now. This kid Thomas Keith must be pretty tough. I haven’t seen him in person, but man, throwing for 1,000 and almost rushing for 1,000, that is your typical high school double-threat. A guy that can do both. Varina has seen guys that can do both. The Meadowbrook kid, Desmond Coble, is similar. A similar player. A good arm and a great runner. They have seen some guys that can do that kind of thing. You’ve got Jerell McFadden as well. I’m looking at his stats.

PF: McFadden is their guy. They have the spread offense and the single wing. McFadden is their big guy. He’s their big threat on the ground and he can throw it up. He has eight touchdowns passes. Thomas Keith is their main quarterback and his brother, Timmy Keith, is their top receiver. Those are the three main threats that they have on offense and they’re all just extremely athletic and talented. Do you think that Varina has played guys with this kind of speed and teams that spread out the offense like Osbourn has?

SL: They have seen some things. Hermitage plays that spread offense. They are a more of a shotgun, four wide receiver kind of offense. They don’t have the speed that Osbourn will have but they have seen some different offenses this year. Highland Springs has a spread offense as well. Varina’s defense is definitely fast and they rely heavily on their two corners. They’re very good. They have a very good defense with two or three Division I prospects. Their safety, Nick Taylor has been starting back there for three years now and he’s only a junior. They’re defense is pretty solid and pretty fast.

I would look for misdirection, a screen here or there. Those fast defenses are sometimes susceptible to — you know, when you are running to the ball and it’s going the other way. I think that is what will give them the most problem, but Varina’s defense has been solid all year long.

PF: That should be scary for Osbourn, having such speed and all these Div. I recruits in Varina’s defensive backfield. Thomas and Jerell can get into the open field and just make plays and that might not be able to happen with Varina’s speed.

SL: Playing in those tough games and not being in a lot of blowouts, I think that is based on two things, the region being a little bit tougher and their offense — it’s a whole new offense. Coach Brown is in his first year at Varina, he was over at Deep Run when they went to the state semis. He is actually a graduate of Varina. He definitely wants a state championship.

The offense that they are running, it’s totally different than what Varina was. It took a while for the kids to get adjusted to it. I’ll tell you though, Tre Johnson, a junior running back, is amazing. This kid is so fast that you can not give him a crack. He has the sideline on you and he is gone. Almost 2,000 yards this year. He is impressive. He did get nicked up in the Meadowbrook game. He was hurt. He should be fine. He can run the ball well and they can create some lanes for him.

QB Hermon Norrell can find WR Bobby Smith, who is playing out of his mind right now — 6-foot-5 and a definite Div. I prospect. If you are at 6-5 and you are getting a one-on-one matchup, just throw the ball to him and out-jump the defender. He is also a good route-runner. He has been special down the stretch. That is the trio that needs to get it done for Varina on the offensive side of the ball.

PF: Do you expect, in any way, for Varina to be looking past Osbourn, knowing that undefeated Oscar Smith and undefeated Oakton — the winner of this game will be facing one of them in the final. Do you think that they may be looking past this Osbourn team?

Osbourn beat an undefeated team in the first round of the region, they beat an undefeated team in the region finals, they have beaten two undefeated teams during the regular season, they’ve played the spoiler quite a bit.

SL: Honestly, with Varina, I don’t think that they are going to be looking past anybody. Yeah, they are 12-0, but you don’t hear much talk about it from them. They will talk about it a little bit, but like I said, coach Brown wants a state championship. To get a state championship, they have to beat Osbourn. There is no lead to look to Oscar Smith and those guys, because if you do, Osbourn is gonna beat you. They are there for a reason. I am pretty sure that coach Brown is saying the same thing. Varina has been in this spot before and lost. They lost a couple of years ago, as you know, to Chantilly in a game that they probably should have won.

PF: Turnovers were key then…

SL: They blew that game, basically. They have been in that spot so many times. They have been in the tournament so many times and haven’t gotten a state championship. I really don’t think that any complacency will set in with these guys. If Osbourn wins the game, it will be because Osbourn was a better team that day.

PF: If Varina would have beaten Chantilly that year, they would have played Osbourn in the state final.

SL: That Varina team was loaded. There was no way that they could lose, but turnover here and there and Chantilly played good ball and they lost that game. That was only two years ago. They will remember that game and know how it felt to lose.

PF: It’s interesting with Osbourn’s defense going against Johnson, last week they went against De’Antwan Williams from Woodbridge

SL: Oh yeah, he’s a beast. We’ve seen him down here…

PF: They held him — okay, well, he still rushed for over 100 yards — but only one touchdown. He had 32 this year. Williams has similar yardage numbers this year to Johnson. I’m interested to see how they handle him with McFadden and Cedar Run District defender of the year Tyler Brown.

SL: I have seen De’Antwan Williams three times. He came and played Highland Springs this year. I saw him against Hermitage in the state semifinals. He is definitely a beast. Tre Johnson is a little bit of a different back. He does not have the power that De’Antwan Williams has. Johnson is a smaller back. He is a slasher. For Osbourn, you don’t want to see him in the open field. When he does, it’s lights out. He is blistering in the open field. Make one guy miss and it’s over. He is not a bruiser. He won’t lower his shoulder and run over a guy like Williams.

PF: His longest touchdown of the year was 93 yards. That says something for Johnson.

SL: It is amazing how he can run the football. That’s going to be a key matchup — Johnson against McFadden. Both in the stat line was running back and McFadden on defense trying to coral Johnson.

Osbourn will host Varina on Saturday at 1 p.m. Check back tomorrow for more on the the Eagles’ AAA Div. 6 VHSL semifinal game.
Previous: Day 1: How Varina Advanced, Day 2: Winning on Paper

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Football Playoff Preview: Osbourn vs. Varina, Day 2

By Paul Frommelt

Prince William Content Manager

pfrommelt@digitalsports.com

Out of 10 AAA Prince William County football teams, the Osbourn Eagles are the last team standing. During the week leading up to the Eagles’ AAA Div. 6 VHSL semifinal matchup against undefeated Varina, Prince William DigitalSports will provide daily articles previewing the big game.

Day 2: Winning On Paper

Winning on paper? Everybody knows that games aren’t won or lost in the stats. It’s still important, however, to know what you’re up against and how your position players compare to your opponent’s. Here is a side-by-side comparison on the cumulative offensive statistics for the Osbourn Eagles and Varina Blue Devils heading into Saturday’s semifinal matchup.

Rushing
Varina
#7 Tre Johnson — 229 attempts, 1950 yards (8.5 avg), 21 TD
#16 Donald Upshaw — 28 attempts, 314 yards (11.2 avg), 3 TD
# 30 Bradley Chapman — 39 attempts, 173 yards (4.4 avg), 0 TD
Total Rushing: 419 attempts, 2,808 yards (6.7 avg), 25 TD
Osbourn
#4 Jerell McFadden — 189 attempts, 1,060 yards (5.6 avg), 12 TD
#7 Thomas Keith — 151 attempts, 887 yards (5.9 avg), 9 TD
#5 Timmy Keith — 19 attempts, 136 yards (7.2 avg), 2 TD
Total Rushing: 447 attempts, 2,280 yards (5.1 avg), 29 TD

Passing
Varina
#12 Norrell Hermon — 79-for-166, 1,336 yards, 19 TD, 10 INT
Total Passing: 79-for-167, 1,336 yards, 19 TD, 10 INT
Osbourn
#7 Thomas Keith — 70-for-154, 1,054 yards, 8 TD, 8 INT
#4 Jerell McFadden — 6-for-11, 275 yards, 3 TD, 0 INT
Total Passing: 88-for-190, 1,444 yards, 11 TD, 9 INT

Receiving
Varina
#2 Bobby Smith — 48 receptions, 901 yards (18.8 avg), 11 TD
#4 Jerel Harrison — 22 receptions, 341 yards (15.5 avg), 5 TD
#16 Donald Upshaw — 5 receptions, 67 yards (13.4 avg), 1 TD
Total Receiving: 79 receptions, 1,336 yards (16.9 avg), 19 TD
Osbourn
#5 Timmy Keith — 31 receptions, 590 yards (19.0 avg), 7 TD
#30 Rodney Whitehead — 16 receptions, 284 yards (17.8 avg), 2 TD
#4 Jerell McFadden — 17 receptions, 178 yards (10.5 avg), 0 TD
Total Receiving: 88 receptions, 1,444 yards (16.4 avg), 11 TDs

Kicking
Varina
#1 Cory *** — 7-for-12 FG, 45 Long, 40-of-45 PAT — 65 Kickoffs, 2,326 yards (35.8 avg)
Osbourn
#1 Tyler Schultze — 6-for-10 FG, 36 Long, 23-of-29 PAT — 58 Kickoffs, 2,563 yards (44.2 avg)

Punting
Varina
#1 Cory *** — 43 punts, 1,358 yards (31.6 avg)
Osbourn
#11 Andrew Koening — 27 punts, 848 yards (31.4 avg)

Punt Returning
Varina
#15 T.K. Hester — 14 returns, 200 yards (14.3 avg)
#19 Jamaal Townes — 10 returns, 137 yards (13.7 avg)
Total Punt Returns: 32 retuns, 445 yards (13.9 avg)
Osbourn
#4 Jerell McFadden — 8 returns, 67 yards (8.4 avg)
#7 Thomas Keith — 5 returns, 46 yards (9.2 avg)
Total Punt Returns: 21 returns, 151 yards (7.2 avg)

Kickoff Returning
Varina
#4 Jerel Harrison — 7 returns, 148 yards (21.1 avg)
#85 Anthony Finney — 6 returns, 147 yards (24.5 avg)
Total Kickoff Returns: 29 returns, 520 yards (17.9 avg)
Osbourn
#4 Jerell McFadden — 11 returns, 246 yards (22.4 avg)
#30 Rodney Whitehead — 8 returns, 168 yards (21.0 avg), 1 TD
#5 Timmy Keith — 6 returns, 138 yards (23.0 avg)
Total Kickoff Returns: 39 returns, 610 yards (15.6 avg)

Total Offense
Varina
2,808 rushing yards, 1,336 passing yards, 4,144 total yards, 351 points (29.3 avg)
Osbourn
2,280 rushing yards, 1,444 passing yards, 3,724 total yards, 308 total poinst (25.7 avg)

Osbourn will host Varina on Saturday at 1 p.m. Check back tomorrow for more on the the Eagles’ AAA Div. 6 VHSL semifinal game.
Previous: Day 1: How Varina Advanced

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Varina Division 6 champs

by Stephen M. Lewis
DigitalSports Richmond
slewis@digitalsports.com

Fourth-and-five from your opponent’s 12-yard line, down four points with plenty of time left.

What would you do?

There was no hesitation on Varina coach Stu Brown‘s part.

After whipping out a timeout, he called a play that found Donald Upshaw for a wide-open TD and eventually a Division 6, Central Region championship, as the Blue Devils beat Meadowbrook 17-14 Saturday afternoon.

It was the moment of truth for a Varina team that led 10-0 with one minute left in the first half, but trailed by four points only five game minutes later.

Varina quarterback Hermon Norrell (9 for 21, 191 yards, two TDs and interceptions) sliced the seam of Meadowbrook’s defense with a 24-yard TD to Jerel Harrison.

Then Cory *** converted a 31-yard field goal after Harrison recovered a Desmond Coble fumble, for the 10-point advantage.

Afterward, Coble got hot, hitting five straight passes. His last heave went 34 yards to Dequinnus Menefee as MBK trailed by only three at the half.

The deficit didn’t stand a chance as halftime didn’t cool Coble.

He bolted for 13 yards on the half’s first play. Then Domico Phillips bursted for 31 of his team-high 54 rushing yards putting the Monarchs in striking distance.

After two Coble runs, he calmly rolled left and found a leaping Jacaurey Thomas for a nine-yard TD that set up Brown’s decision.

“We just had to redirect the route,” said Brown, in his first year as head coach at Varina. “In the timeout we were able to talk to ’em. Fortunately, they lined up the way we thought they would.

“We’re regional champs, baby!”

Aside from the clutch pitch-and-catch play, it was Varina’s defensive effort that brought home a second region crown in three seasons.

The Blue Devils (12-0) did a masterful job of keeping the slick Coble in the pocket. The junior signal-caller is so dangerous when he makes defenders miss and gets out on the boundary.

In turn, it forced Coble (11 for 25, 124 yards, two TDs) to strike from the pocket. He did on occassion, but the usually reliable Chris Carter couldn’t hold on to Coble’s TD pass late in the third in Varina territory.

Then on fourth down from Varina’s 23-yard line, Coble just missed Carter streaking behind Varina’s defense. So close, yet so far.

The Blue Devils didn’t need to score anymore, just run out the clock behind a big offensive line, Norrell, Trey Johnson (17 carries, 75 yards) and surprisingly wide receiver Bobby Smith.

With Johnson nicked up, Smith got in the shotgun and carried for a first down once down the stretch.

But it was his six receptions for 143 yards that helped set up all three of Varina’s scores.

He ripped down a 33-yarder before Harrison’s TD catch.

Smith, at 6-5, hauled in a 46-yarder to set up ***’s field goal. And he also nabbed a 20- and a 34-yarder (with pass interference) to set up the fourth-down game-winner.

“We had to come out and play as one unit,” said Smith, as Varina’s faithful mobbed every player around in exuberance. “We had to be all on the same page. I feel like I had to make plays for my team.

“Coach always tells us that everybody has a role on the team. It feels great.”

Meadowbrook  0  7 7 0 – 14
Varina              0 10 7 0 – 17
V – Harrison 24 pass from Norrell (*** kick)
V – FG *** 31
M – Menefee 34 pass from Coble (Ornelas kick)
M – Thomas 9 pass from Coble (Ornelas kick)
V – Upshaw 12 pass from Norrell (*** kick)

RUSHING

Meadowbrook – Domico Phillips 7 carries, 54 yards, Coble 15-29, Jevonn Worsham 1-1, Denzel West 3-0; Varina – Trey Johnson 17-75, Norrell 9-25, Smith 2-15, Chapman 2-2, Finney 1-3, Upshaw 2-8, Dequan Pegues 1-(5)

PASSING

Meadowbrook – Coble 11 completions, 25 attempts, 0 interceptions, 124 yards; Varina – Norrell 9-21-2-191

RECEIVING

Meadowbrook – Jacaurey Thomas 3 receptions, 44 yards, Dequinnus Menefee 3-43, Chris Carter 2-12, Phillips 1-11, Worsham 1-1, Akil Dorsey 1-4; Varina – Smith 6-143, Harrison 2-36, Upshaw 1-12

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Region champs crowned

Division 5 Championship

Dinwiddie (11-1) 34, Hanover (8-4) 17
* The Generals will host Liberty of Bealeton of the Northwest Region next week in the state semifinals.

Division 6 Championship

Varina (12-0) 17, Meadowbrook (9-3) 14
* Bobby Smith pulls in six balls for over 140 yards to lead Varina.

The Blue Devils’ defense did a fantastic job of containing the deadly Desmond Coble at QB. Varina will travel to Osbourn next week in the state semis.

Osbourn topped Woodbridge 24-20 Friday.

MORE TO COME from VARINA-MEADOWBROOK!!

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Richmond Elite Indoor Tryouts

Field hockey is not over!

Elite and recreational players have an opportunity to fine-tune their games in the winter.

The Richmond Elite Indoor tryouts will take place Saturday, November 22 at Providence Elementary School.

Age group U-19 go from 8 a.m.-10 a.m., followed by ages U-16 and U-14 from 10 a.m.-noon.

The recreation sign-up deadline is January 3, 2009 and is at the Chesterfield County Fairgrounds across from L.C. Bird.

Click the flyer link below for more information! Contact Danielle Hess (danielle_hess@ccpsnet.net) or dominionfieldhockey@msn.com.

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