Posts Tagged ‘1A’

State Academic Awards

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Each year the NIAA partners with Jostens to honor the top academic team in each classification for each sport. Winners are determined by averaging a teams individual GPAs from the previous semester, getting an overall average and comparing them against other teams.

They also recognize the varsity student-athletes who achieve a 4.0 and name them to the all-State Academic Team.

The NIAA considers this state championship award to be equal to the athletic championship in an effort to remind  all student-athletes, parents, coaches and fans, that sports should remain an extension of their academic experience.

The following is a list of the Winter Season winners:

Cross Country

Boys

2A - Whittell, 3.45

3A - Dayton, 3.61

4A - Carson, 3.79

Girls

2A - Sage Ridge, 3.82

3A - Truckee, 3.77

4A - Palo Verde, 3.90

Football

1A - Pahranagat Valley, 3.31

2A - Lincoln County, 3.48

3A - Truckee, 3.31

4A - Churchill County, 3.27

Girls Golf

2A - Battle Mountain, 3.6

3A - Truckee, 3.65

4A - Damonte Ranch, 3.7

Soccer

Boys

3A - The Meadows, 3.34

4A - Reno, 3.31

Girls

3A - Truckee, 3.73

4A - Douglas, 3.69

Tennis

Boys

4A - 3.71

Girls

4A - Clark, 3.77

Volleyball

1A - Coleville, 3.83

2A - Pershing County, 3.7

3A - Boulder City, 3.85

4A - Churchill County, 3.64

Spirit

1A - Jackpot, 3.6

2A - Battle Mountain, 3.36

3A - Moapa Valley, 3.34

4A - Bishop Gorman, 3.48

Pahranagat’s Championship, 10 Years in the Making

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

On Fall Friday nights in Alamo, you can look in the North end zone and watch a large group of little kids playing their own game of football, even though there’s a game of hard hitting high school ball going on simultaneously.

Ten years from now who knows which of those youngsters will step up and become the next athlete to lead the Panthers to a state title game, as happened in their 22-18 win over Tonopah Saturday at Arbor View High.

Ten years ago, it was Brady Whipple and Taylor Poulsen in that playground game forging a bond that paid off for the Panthers on Saturday when they needed it the most.

Pahranagat took a 14-0 lead into halftime on a two 10 yard runs by Poulsen (27-99, 2 td).  The first capped a 9 play drive in the first quarter. The second came following a blocked punt by Sophomore Jeremy Roemer and a two play drive.

Tonopah took the second half kickoff at their 40 yard line and drove the fieldd in 6 plays with a 24 yard run by Senior Scott Thibodeaux (17-135, 1td) and a 24 yard completion from Thibodeaux (6-17-90, 1td) to Sophomore Eddie Reynoso covering most of the yardage. The final 7 yards were covered on the ground by Thibodeaux for the score. The PAT was no good and the lead was cut to 8.

The Muckers forced a three and out and following the punt took over at their 37.  Thibodeaux made a great read on the option, giving the ball to Denver Otteson (8-83, 1td), who broke the the initial pressure and found no one between him and the end zone. 63 yards later the Muckers cut the lead to 14-12.

Momentum had definitely swung to Tonpopah and they ended the Panthers next drive on an interception by Rene Martinez. The teams swapped possessions twice before the Panthers found some light on a 19 yard fade route from Poulsen (9-20-129, 1 td) to Kale Leavitt (5-87) to end the third quarter.

The Muckers defense who recorded 6 sacks after the Panthers had only given up 2 all season, once again forced Pahranagat into a punting situation. On a 4th and 6 Whipple took the snap and was suppossed to run to the left on a fake attempt. He went the wrong way and was hit hard by a swarm of Muckers.

On his way to the ground, he looked around needing to do something to get that first down. There, a few feet away, was his long time, playground teammate, Poulsen. As he probably did hundreds of times in that North end zone when younger, Whipple pitched the ball back to Poulsen, who took it and scampered around the left side for a 25 yard gain and a first down.

“I was right there, looked at him and he threw it to me,” Poulsen said of the play that took control of the momentum swing.  5 plays later  it was a 9 yard fade from Poulsen to Whipple that capped the 12 play drive and a successful PAT run by Whipple pushed their lead back to 10.

When asked about the play, Coach Ken Higbee added,” Those two have been doing that together for a long time. The beauty of a small town is the kids are friends on and off the field. Play makers make plays in big games and that’s exactly what happened.” There aren’t very many instances when an off the field friendship wins the on-field game, but this was one.

Tonopah put together their own 11 play drive on the ensuing possession. They converted on a 4th and 2 on a 21 yard Thibodeaux scramble then on a 4th and 9 from the 20, Thibodeaux found Otteson(4-51, 1td) across the middle for a 20 yard touchdown strike and a 4 point deficit with 2:16 to go.

Tonopah’s onside attempt failed and the Panthers were able to run the time out for their third State Championship in four years.

“My hats off to Alamo. They have a program and will be the team to beat because of that. Whipple and Poulsen have been playing together since they were little kids and it showed on that punt play,” Tonopah Coach Curt McElroy said of the momentum changing play.

“We came in and played our hearts out. This is a great group of kids I’ve had the chance to watch grow up. They’ve been with me since I got here 11 years ago. I’m going to miss them,” added McElroy, who had a chance to go to a bigger program after a job offer in the off season, but chose to stay and see his seniors through.

“After last week, our defense wanted to prove that they could stop the pass and we got a complete game from our corners today. We were fortunate today to witness some great players, but even better we saw some great kids on both sides of the ball,” said Higbee following the his fourth title as head coach. It was the schools 12th title since 1978, moving them to 5th all-time.

Pahranagat Valley, Coleville: A Game for the Ages

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

When the time finally read 0:00, a passerby might have thought Pahranagat Valley had lost the game. The scoreboard read Pahranagat 28, Coleville 74. It wasn’t equipped to show the actual score, as the Panthers defeated the Wolves in their round 2 playoff game, 128-74. It was the first meeting between the two teams since 1974, and proved to be a special game.

The Panther’s Senior duo of Taylor Poulsen and Brady Whipple combined for 5 rushing touchdowns on 308 yards and connected through the air 6 times for 241 yards and 5 scores. Whipple added two kick returns for scores.

“What a memory for everyone that was at this game. Whether they’re from Alamo or Coleville, what a game,” Coach Ken Higbee said following his 101st win, and his team’s record-scoring victory.

The teams combined for 118 points and 854 yards in the first half, en route to 1266 yards for the game and 212 points. At a score of 62-52 at the half, they were well on their way in the shoot out.

The Panthers took the opening kickoff and put together a 6 play drive that ended in a 20 yard touchdown pass from Poulsen (11-17-317,5 td) to Whipple (6-241, 5 td’s). Coleville answered with a 30 yard toss from Jason Peters (31-44-519 yds, 10 td, 1 int) to Emmi Sandoval (13-259 yds, 8 td’s) after just 4 plays.

The teams would trade scores their next 4 possessions, before the Wolves got a stop on a fumble recovery by Senior Will Goode. Each team added another score, with the Panthers crossing the line with :17 left in the quarter on a 43 yard catch and run from Poulsen to Whipple, their 4th of the quarter. It was 30-26 after 1.

The second quarter looked much the same as the first as Peters picked apart the top ranked 1A defense, scoring on 8 straight possessions.  They got the score back to 54-52 with :19 seconds left, but Whipple returned the ensuing kickoff 77 yards to get back to 60-52.

The Panthers converted their PAT, making it 62-52. Pahranagat converted 7 of 8 in the half and 13 of 17 total. Coleville was 2 of 8 in the half and 4 of 11 for the game.

Coleville lined up to receive the 2nd half kickoff and Pahranagat booted an onside kick they recovered. Four plays later, they scored on a 1 yard plunge by Chase Leavitt. 

The Panthers found a way to keep the ball from Peters. Kicker Jason Choi, an exchange student from South Korea that had not played football before this season, kicked 5 more on-sides, recovering 4 of them. “Jason works really hard every day on placing the ball and he really came through for us today as an integral part of what we do, ” added Higbee.

The Wolves only got 3 possessions in the quarter and 1 score, while Pahranagat had 6 possessions and scored each time. They ran their lead to 106-60 at the end of 3 and a running clock helped to limit Coleville’s possessions.

The Wolves added two scores in the 4th, a 6 yard strike from Peters to Sandoval, their 8th of the game and a 71 yard kick return by John “Buh” Hamilton. Whipple capped the scoring for the Panthers on a 50 yard kick return after an onside attempt by Coleville.

“This just shows that you don’t win the big games without a defense. They found a weakness in the kickoffs and exploited it,” said Will Sandy, Coleville’s coach of 18 years. “Jason (Peters) seperated his non-throwing shoulder in the first series and we weren’t able to run him or play him on defense.”

” We had a heck of a run, but if we want to play with the big teams, we have to get stronger. We’re young and we need to get into the weight room. I hope the guys learned that tonight.”

Within that run, the Wolves broke several records. Peters broke many single game records as well as season records. He ended the season 198-321 for 3477 yards, 59 touchdowns and 8 int’s. His yardage and touchdowns broke the previous records of 3285 and 44. He also rushed for another 21 scores in 10 games.

Emmi Sandoval, playing in 8 games, had 75 receptions for 1686 yards and 31 td’s; the yards and td’s are state records, breaking the previous records of 1631 and 25.

The combination of Peters to Sandoval will be one we follow closely again next season, as Peters is a Junior and Sandoval a Sophomore.

Pahranagat’s win advances them to the state title game where they will face Tonopah, who defeated Carlin 71-30 to advance. The Panthers defeated Tonopah in the regular season 50-33. They will play their rematch at Arbor View High in Vegas, Saturday at noon.

The Muckers are the defending champs, while Pahranagat looks to win their 4th title in 7 years and their 12th overall.

Volleyball Championship Scores

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

1A

Lake Mead def McDermitt 3-0 (25-12, 25-16, 25-12)

Pahranagat Valley def Owyhee 3-0 (25-19, 25-10, 25-23)

Lake Mead def Pahranagat 3-1 (19-25, 31-29, 25-21, 27-25) to win championship

2A

Whittell def The Meadows 3-2 (22-25,  25-23, 19-25, 25-17, 16-14)

Lincoln Co def North Tahoe 3-0 (25-23, 25-21, 25-23)

Whittell def Lincoln Co 3-1 to win championship

3A

Truckee def Moapa Valley 3-0 (26-24, 25-19, 25-19)

Yerington def Dayton 3-0 (25-15, 25-21, 25-22)

Yerington def Truckee 3-0 (25-11, 25-17, 25-20) to win championship

4A

Reno def Durango 3-1 (25-17, 17-25, 25-17, 25-12)

Bishop Manogue def Silverado 3-1(25-22, 25-27, 25-23, 26-24)

Bishop Manogue def Reno 3-1(25-21, 25-20, 23-25, 25-19) to win championship

Week 12 Football-Playoff Scores

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Pahranagat Valley 128, Coleville 74

Tonopah 71, Carlin 30 (for game summary, click here)

The Meadows 23, Battle Mtn 14

Pershing Co 28, Mtn View 22

Bishop Manogue 48, Reno 6

Moapa Valley 35, Fernley 7

Truckee 35, Virgin Valley 7

Las Vegas 45, Green Valley 32

Del Sol 42, Basic 27

Palo Verde 35, Cimarron 21

Bishop Gorman 37, Cheyenne 36

Damonte Ranch 9, Hug 7

Reed 44, Douglas 24

McQueen 56, Galena 16