By Marty Kirkland
martykirkland@daltoncitizen.com
November 14, 2009 01:08 am
—
Dalton’s offense got to show off its big-play potential one last time Friday night.
By
making even more big plays than the Catamounts, the Tucker Tigers
showed why they’re going to get another chance to prove what their
offense can do.
Dalton outgained the Tigers in total offense, but
struggled to finish off drives with points, while the Tigers made sure
their big plays came at the right time in a 35-13 win at Harmon Field
in the first round of the Class 4A state playoffs.
“We moved the
ball real well from 20 to 20, but we struggled in the red zone,” said
coach Adam Winegarden, whose Cats had 389 offensive yards to Tucker’s
349. “We had the ball down there four or five times and didn’t come up
with anything. You can’t do that against a good team and Tucker’s a
good football team.”
Region 6 No. 3 seed Tucker (9-2) — ranked 10th
in Class 4A in the final regular season Associated Press poll and the
defending state champ — advances to play at Sandy Creek, a 37-19 winner
over Loganville on Friday, in next week’s second round.
The Tigers
quieted the home crowd quickly Friday as Devin Scott returned the
opening kickoff 78 yards to Dalton’s 15-yard line and Tyrelle Poole
scored on a 2-yard touchdown run three plays later, giving Tucker a 7-0
lead a little more than a minute into the first quarter.
But the
Cats (7-4), the No. 2 seed from Region 7, gave their fans reason to
cheer on their first possession as quarterback Stryker Brown lateraled
to wide receiver Tevin Collins, who passed to fullback Shaquon Moore,
all by himself downfield, for a 66-yard pickup that set up a 3-yard
touchdown run by Tre Beck three plays later.
After the game,
Winegarden said that was going to be the first play called all week
long, but its success was timely as the Cats put themselves right back
on equal footing with the Tigers. They had tried the same play on a few
occasions this season, but this attempt netted the best result by far.
“We
had to come out with something, big guns, to try to get the momentum
back,” Collins said. “We did that. I feel like everybody played hard
tonight.”
But while the Tigers scored on two of their next three
possessions — Scott, who finished with 91 yards on 12 carries, had
touchdown runs of 2 and 11 yards — to post a 21-7 lead they’d take into
halftime, the Cats found themselves cooling the deeper they moved into
Tucker territory.
After scoring on its opening drive, Dalton went
three-and-out, saw Jose Garcia hook a 37-yard field goal attempt wide
left, turned the ball over on downs at the Tucker 19 and turned the
ball over on downs at the Tucker 32. Moore was stopped for no gain on a
run up the middle on fourth-and-one at the 19, while Brown had no
chance to get off a pass when he was sacked for an 8-yard loss by a
swarm of Tucker defenders at the 32.
“We did what we wanted to on
offense, but we just fell apart towards the goal line. We didn’t have
what it took to get it in,” said Brown, whose 117 rushing yards made up
a big chunk of Dalton’s offense Friday, along with a 98-yard effort on
the ground by Moore.
Tucker coach Franklin Stephens thought his
defense’s wall-like response in those situations — they also limited
1,000-yard rusher Beck to 5 yards on six carries — might have been more
about tenacity than technique.
“Dalton has a great offense,”
Stephens said. “ ... I think we played hard. Sometimes that’s the best
adjustment — play hard and take care of your assignment.”
The Tigers didn’t have many possessions without a spark, either.
Scott’s
second touchdown run was part of a two-play drive set up by a 69-yard
run from Rendell Wilder, who finished with a team-best 98 yards on 11
carries, and Tucker’s first possession of the third quarter — which
came after Dalton moved the ball to the Tucker 18, but lost ground on a
delay of game penalty and had incomplete passes on third and fourth
down — started with a 39-yard run by Scott. He finished it with a
1-yard touchdown run for a 28-7 lead with 1:37 to play in the third
quarter.
But Tucker’s ability to keep moving on offense wasn’t about
any single player. Five backs had at least four carries and 21 yards,
with junior quarterback Norman Hayes managing his team’s wing-T attack
well and chipping in a couple big plays of his own — he scrambled for a
crucial first down on the drive that netted Scott’s third touchdown and
found Chris Sanders on a 48-yard catch to set up the Tigers’ final
score, a 4-yard run by Wilder with 4:06 to play.
“It’s really nice to have an offense like this,” Hayes said. “We know we can go to anyone and count on everybody.”
The
Cats, who won the Sub-region 7A-4A title this year and claimed a 50th
consecutive winning season, closed to 28-13 on Brown’s 1-yard touchdown
run with 8:28 to play, but couldn’t recover the onside kickoff that
followed and trailed by three scores when they got the ball for the
final time with 3:59 on the clock.
TIGERS 35, CATAMOUNTS 13
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Tucker 14 7 7 7 — 35
Dalton 7 0 0 6 — 13
SCORING SUMMARY
First Quarter
TUC — Poole 2 run (Miguel Cruz kick), 10:45
DAL — Beck 3 run (Jose Garcia kick), 8:51
TUC — Devin Scott 2 run (Cruz kick), 5:11
Second Quarter
TUC — Scott 11 run (Cruz kick), 11:07
Third Quarter
TUC — Scott 1 run (Cruz kick), 1:37
Fourth Quarter
DAL — Stryker Brown 1 run (Garcia kick), 8:28
TUC — Rendell Wilder 4 run (Cruz kick), 4:06
YARDSTICK
TUC DAL
First Downs 13 15
Rushes-Yds. 46-297 42-220
Passing Yds. 52 169
Com.-Att.-Int. 2-4-0 8-23-0
Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-0
Punts-Avg. 2-35.5 1-32
Penalties-Yds. 5-25 8-40
Turnovers 0 0
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING
— Tucker: Rendell Wilder 11-98, Devin Scott 12-91, Norman Hayes 7-47,
N’Quan Maggett 8-44, Tyrelle Poole 4-21, Team 4-minus 4; Dalton:
Stryker Brown 15-117, Shaquon Moore 21-98, Tre Beck 6-5.
PASSING — Tucker: Hayes 2-4-0-52; Dalton: Brown 6-20-0-78, Tevin Collins 2-2-0-91.
RECEIVING — Tucker: Chris Sanders 1-48, Seantavius Jackson 1-4; Dalton: Chas Thomason 5-69, Moore 1-66, Brown 1-25, Collins 1-9.
Copyright © 1999-2008 cnhi, inc.