|
Football: Poly Puts It Together In Shutout Over Jordan by
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
| Poly | 10.03.09 | | lbpostsports.com
Photo by John Fajardo In the Moore League opener, two teams searching for an
identity entered Vet's Stadium—Poly (2-3, 1-0) emerged feeling like the pieces
were finally starting to come together, while Jordan (1-3, 0-1) showed they
still have work to do to overcome several key injuries, in a 31-0 Jackrabbit
victory.
Jordan's strategy in the first half was as obvious as it was
effective: chew the clock, and keep Poly's offense off the field to prevent new
quarterback Chris Leachman from establishing a rhythm. Jordan kept the ball for over 18 of the
first 24 minutes, with drives of six and a half minutes, two and a half, and
ten minutes. And they moved the
ball well, gaining 134 yards and driving into Poly's red zone twice—but failing
to gain points either time, thanks to a field goal block by Poly's Ryan
Goforth, and a wide-left attempt.
Poly's offense certainly didn't slip into any kind of
rhythm, however, at least for the first 22 minutes. Leachman didn't get a chance early, as Poly tried to
establish the run on the first two of their three first-half drives. On the second, they drove to the red
zone but were turned away on a fourth-and-one. But the 'Rabbits—who had considered using the hurry-up
offense as a way to get the ball rolling—got the spark they needed when they let
Leachman loose in the two-minute offense.
After a touchback from the Panther field goal attempt, Poly
took the ball with 1:37 left in the half.
Leachman was 5/6 for 63 yards on the drive, with two well-chosen dumps
to running back Michael Simmons, a sideline toss to TE Earnest Pettway, a
bullet to sophomore Randall Goforth, and a 22-yard toss over the middle that
Goforth made a dive for, landing in the end zone to give Poly a 7-0 lead, and
their first offensive points in two weeks. Leachman finished 14/22 for 203 yards and two TDs, and the
senior looked very comfortable in his new role. "I was impressed with his composure," said Poly
coach Raul Lara. "He sat in
the pocket and did a good job looking downfield."
The second half was a combination of Poly seizing
opportunities, making defensive adjustments to shut down Jordan's option runs,
and the undermanned Panthers squad getting worn out. Jordan couldn't maintain possession long enough to execute
their game plan—they had six drives in the second half, three of them ending in
interceptions (two of which were pulled down by Aric Bundage and one by Fiso
Salamo off a tip), one in a lost fumble, and one with a bad punt snap rolling
back to their own two.
The Panthers gained just 43 yards, along with the 5
turnovers, which gives the Poly defense something to hang their hat on: in the
second half of their last two games, they've allowed less than 100 yards total
while taking the ball away nine times.
That kind of defensive effort makes it easy for an offense to put the
pieces together, and Poly did that by putting up 24 points. Leachman tossed another touchdown—to
Kaelin Clay in the corner—and punched in a TD on the sneak. The only thing not working for Poly,
strangely, was the run game, as they gained just 75 yards total on the
game.
Despite the second-half effort, Lara knows his team isn't
done working yet. "Our
defense had a real hard time stopping them in the first half. To me, we have a long way to go still—with
a pretty big game coming up."
His quarterback may not have taken a lot of varsity reps this season,
but he was a well-trained vet when it came to talking to the media, giving
everyone but himself the credit.
"The line was blocking great, and all of our receivers were making
great plays to get to the ball.
I'm glad we won, but I think I have a lot of work to do before we play
Lakewood next week."
Jordan coach Scott Meyer's team will travel to play Oaks
Christian, and says his goal is simple: "We just need to get better. I thought we got a lot better
tonight. We played good defense,
but they just wore us down."
|