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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Outlaws
survive football scare
The Sisters football
team survived a scare in its homecoming contest against Molalla last Friday,
October 11.
The Outlaws ultimately prevailed
over the Indians by a 20-14 score to improve to 6-0 and remain undefeated
for the season.
"We just didn't hit on all
cylinders," said Coach Bob Macauley. "We weren't in sync."
The game started out well.
The Outlaws controlled the first half. The defense shut down the Indians'
attack and allowed only 51 yards in the first two quarters. On offense,
Seth Teague took an option and rushed 18 yards midway through the first
quarter for a 7-0 lead.
Then the offense sputtered
and struggled.
"We dropped five passes, and
three of those would have gone for scores, because they were behind the
defenders. In addition, we had two touchdowns that were called back because
of penalties," the coach said.
After a Sisters drive stalled
at the Molalla 10-yard line, the defense once again held and forced a
punt. Andy Macauley broke through the line and blocked the kick, and the
Outlaws were in business with two minutes left in the half.
Chris Wimer scored on a three-yard
run, and the Outlaws were up 13-0.
"Andy's block of that punt
gave us a big lift going in at the half," said Macauley. "It was a huge
play."
The third quarter was played
between the 20-yard lines, with neither team scoring. Then came the pivotal
fourth quarter, where things "got kind of nutty," according to Coach Macauley.
"We made it interesting for
everybody," he said.
The Outlaws seemed to have
things well in hand with five minutes to play when Molalla broke a couple
of big plays to make a game of it at 13-7.
Sisters was quick to strike
back. After recovering the on-side kick, Pat Burke hit Juwan Davis with
a 53-yard touchdown pass to make it 20-7 with 2:57 to play.
The Indians then went 80 yards
in less than a minute and scored a touchdown to draw within 20-14.
"We played a prevent defense,
and they did a good job of going right at it," said Macauley. "I think
'prevent defense' means 'prevents you from winning.'"
With 2:10 left, things got
even scarier for the Outlaws. Molalla tried another on-side kick, and
successfully recovered this one. It looked as though Sisters' homecoming
celebration was in jeopardy, but the defense stiffened and held the Indians
on downs.
The offense took over and
ran out the clock to end the game, and Macauley was able to finally breathe
a sigh of relief.
"This was a 'get-by game,'"
he acknowledged. "It was a game that you're just glad to get by. Molalla
is a good team -- they were picked to go to state. Our first three league
games of Stayton, Molalla, and Sweet Home are our toughest conference
match-ups."
Sisters ended the game with
302 yards of total offense, compared to 272 for Molalla. Quarterback Pat
Burke led the attack with 11 of 19 passing for 193 yards and one touchdown.
The Outlaws next have a date
with Sweet Home on Friday, October 18.
"It will be a great high school
football game. They have been our chief rivals for the past seven years,
and this year, they are big, fast, and are scoring a lot of points," said
Macauley.
"It should be the game of
the year." |
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