Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Column: Scarbrough's Take: SEC Takes Its Time, Gets It Right


 

By Lyn Scarbrough

Lindy's Sports

 “Patience is a virtue.”

… A phrase first credited to William Langford, a little known Englishman, in his allegory Piers Plowman around 1360

“Good things come to those who wait.”

… A partial quote from President Abraham Lincoln, not all of what he said, but all that is ever repeated

“Be patient, everything will come together.”

… From an often quoted source – Anonymous

History is full of people that agreed with the Southeastern Conference.

Not many, especially not SEC fans, agreed with the conference back in August, not when Commissioner Greg Sankey and the 14 university presidents kept dragging their feet. While other conferences, college and pro, were making announcements, the SEC was making fans uneasy. For sure, the jury was out. Would there be football?

This past Saturday, the verdict became clear.

The Southeastern Conference, the league that waited, got it right.

The SEC became the last Power 5 league to start the 2020 season, the first of 10 conference-only games to be played by mid-December.

That came about six weeks after the Big Ten became the first Power 5 league to postpone the 2020 season. On August 11, that conference announced that no league games would be played in the 2020 calendar year, but that games might be played in early 2021, not giving details about how that might happen.

The Big Ten, often compared to the SEC but seldom coming out on top, probably thought the other conferences would follow its lead, but that didn’t happen.

The Mid-American Conference (the MAC), the Group of 5 league embedded in Big Ten country, did postpone its games.

Another Power 5 conference, the Pac-12, delayed its schedule, but it was facing laughingly outrageous demands from players, at the same time that some league cities were being torched by rioters. So, there were other reasons that could have made a no-season seem like a good season. And, the Mountain West, the Group of 5 conference in the Pac-12 footprint, also postponed its games.

That was it. Nobody else followed. Ironically, by the time SEC teams kicked off their first games a few days ago, all four of those early trigger-pulling conferences had already announced that they would play football in 2020 after all.

Back to the SEC, a couple of important things have proven, at least so far, that the league did it the right way by moving the start of the season to Sept. 26 and setting Dec. 19 for the Championship Game.

** It allowed several extra weeks for the coronavirus to run its course, for protocols to be put in place, for testing procedures to be implemented and for honing plans for the first game day.

** It allowed for two “off” weeks for every team, making re-scheduling games more viable in case of COVID postponements.

While the other Power 5 conferences (Atlantic Coast, Big 12) and Group of 5 leagues (American Athletic, C-USA, Sun Belt) did follow the SEC’s lead by not postponing the season, none of them delayed the start until the end of September.

What has happened? All five of those conferences have had multiple games postponed and a few cancelled, making rescheduling necessary, in some cases impossible.

All seven SEC games were played as scheduled with no significant issues regarding team travel, stadium set-up, game day management or on-the-field play. Limited numbers of in-stadium fans, along with countless thousands in front of televisions, saw well-organized and for the most part well-played match-ups.

Most were exciting and most were competitive for most of the game. Home field advantages – now with fewer fans, no pregame tailgating, no marching bands – were mostly non-existent, as only two of seven home teams won.

Even when the Big Ten and the other non-starters finally decided to play football, they didn’t do it right. Season starts were delayed and the number of games were reduced … Big Ten (eight games, starting Oct. 23, Championship Game Dec. 19) … Pac-12 (seven games, starting Nov. 6, Championship Game Dec. 18) … Mountain West (eight games, starting Oct. 24, Championship Dec. 19) … MAC (six games, starting Nov. 4, Championship Game Dec. 18 or 19). That leaves little wiggle room for games that may not be played due to COVID issues.

Revenue and postseason play were two main reasons for the changes of heart. Of course, those two go hand-in-hand. With no games, those four conferences would miss out on television revenues and wouldn’t be available for postseason play, including College Football Playoff consideration.

The moves raise a couple of significant questions:

** Does a team that just plays 7-8 games, and didn’t start playing until late October or November, deserve to be invited to the football Final Four? Should an undefeated team from one of those leagues be considered over a one-loss SEC team that played 10 or more conference games? We’ll see how plays out.

** If the Big Ten and Pac-12 hadn’t started their league seasons, how much would it have mattered anyway in the national championship picture?

It’s tough to argue with the facts on that. Take the last decade (2010 – 2019). Those 10 years produced 20 spots in the national championship game … two teams every season. Of those, one came from the Big Ten (Ohio State) and a Pac-12 team played twice (Oregon both times). Six times it was an Atlantic Coast Conference team (four times Clemson, once each for Florida State and Notre Dame, which is an ACC member for the 2020 season).

Eleven times it was an SEC team, providing 55% of championship contestants. And, it wasn’t isolated, as three teams played multiple times (Alabama 6, Auburn 2, LSU 2), along with a single appearance for Georgia.

Much to the chagrin of the other Power 5 conferences, SEC teams won six national championships during that span.

Maybe the most important aspect where the SEC got it right was in terms of perception. Its fans weren’t let down. Its players weren’t disappointed. Recruiting wasn’t sidetracked. And, the league wasn’t branded … not as being knee-jerk or being political or being a quitter.

Heading into this Saturday’s full slate of games, four SEC teams are among the Top 7 and six are in the Top 14 in the national polls. As for the Big Ten, it has two teams in the Top 10 and still doesn’t play a game for another five weeks.

It was easier finding quotes that supported the SEC’s approach than it was trying to find any that could explain how the Big Ten handled things. But there were a couple:

“Sometimes the early bird gets the worm, but sometimes the early bird gets  frozen to death.” … Canadian-American economist, Myron Scholes

And, one that gives them credit for recognizing the wisdom of the SEC, then finally going in that direction:

“There is no stigma attached to recognizing a bad decision in time to install a better one.” … the late Canadian educator Laurence J. Peter, formulator of the famous Peter Principle

Simply stated, the Peter Principle says that people will rise to their highest level of incompetence.

For sure, that’s not something that the Southeastern Conference needs to worry about regarding how it has handled the challenges and hurdles of the 2020 football season so far.

Thanks much Southeastern Conference.

Your patience paid off. You got it right. Well done.

 Lindy's Sports columnist Lyn Scarbrough is a contributor to this blog.  He lives deep in SEC country and offers his take on the College Football landscape.

 

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

North Cedar hangs with Rebels in loss

 STANWOOD — The North Cedar Knight football team came into their home opener off of a disappointing loss at Durant in week one. Last Friday, the Knights welcomed in Northeast for their last non-district game in week 2. There, the Knights matched the Rebels first two scores with two of their own, but a third quarter touchdown by the Rebels was the difference in the game. Northeast took a 20-14 win, dropping the Knights record to 0-2. North Cedar will play Iowa City Regina this week to begin district play.
 North Cedar’s offense saw a great day through the air as quarterback Jaxon Sander threw for 227 yards while completing 12 passes in the game. He had two touchdowns, but also had two interceptions. Sander’s main target was senior Kael Unruh. Unruh caught eight passes for 204 yards and two touchdowns. Gage Walshire and Nate Meyer also caught passes in the game.
 Gage Walshire led North Cedar in rushing with 14 yards on four carries. Sander chipped in 11 yards on the ground on five carries.
 Defensively, North Cedar was led in tackles by Luke Crock with 10.5 stops. Ethan Thimmes had 9.5 tackles and Gage Walshire had 7.5 tackles.

Tiger girls cross-country places third in Iowa City

 IOWA CITY — The Tipton Tiger girl’s cross-country team has some new faces on the 2020 team, a year after reaching the state cross-country meet. Those new faces and a few returners had a great first meet, placing third at the annual Bob Brown Classic last week. The Tigers scored 95 team points in their top-3 team finish. Iowa City Liberty won the meet with a team score of 23 and Solon was second with 68 points.
 Liberty High came into the meet ranked No. 15 in Class 4A and dominated the field, placing four runners in the top-10 finishers including overall winner Ashlyn Keeney in 19:33 and runner-up Cami Mac in 19:43. Tipton had one top-10 finisher
 in Kallie Wallick. Wallick ran to a finishing time of 21:37. Tipton had three other runners finish in the top-25 finishers. Rebecca Hinderaker just missed a top-15 finish with a 13th place finish in 22:22. Alyssa Mente placed 20th in 22:49, and Alivia Edens placed 24th in 23:09. Other THS finishers were Coryn Wallick 33rd in 23:39, Addie Nerem 55th in 25:37, Alli Nash 61st in 26:13, and Nicole McDonald 93rd in 30:17. The Tigers were ranked No. 11 in Class 2A at the time of the race.
Wilton placed seventh as a team with 202 points. The Beavers were led by Charlotte Brown with a 23rd place finish in 23:02. Hannah Rogers placed in the top-10, placing 40th in 24:10. Other
Wilton finishers were SeAnn Houghton 63rd, Ava Barrett 65th, and Ansley Boorn 100th.
North Cedar scored 209 team points and were seven points out of placing seventh place in the team race. North Cedar had two top-40 finishers. Hunter Jones led North Cedar, placing 28th in 23:28 while Kiley Chapman was 35th in 23:45. Other North Cedar finishers were Sarah Redhage in 89th, Karly Cerda in 99th, and Jillet Spahr in 104th.

Bob Brown Cross-Country Classic
Kicker’s Fields
Iowa City, Iowa
Thursday, September 3
Girl’s Team Results:
1. Iowa City Liberty 23, 2. Solon 68, 3. Tipton 95, 4. Mount Vernon-Lisbon 97, 5. Monticello 132, 6. Iowa City Regina 136, 7. Wilton 202, 8. North Cedar 209.
Top-10 Finishers:
1. Ashlyn Keeney (ICL) 19:33, 2. Cami Mac (ICL) 19:43, 3. Annalee Bartels (ICR) 20:56, 4. McKenzie Logan (ICL) 21:12, 5. Cori Mac (ICL) 21:13, 6. Laura Swart (MVL) 21:19, 7. Emma Althoff (MONTI) 21:21, 8. Anna Hoffman (MVL) 21:33, 9. Kallie Wallick (T) 21:37, 10. Kiersten Conway (S) 21:39.
Team Results:
TIPTON (95): 9. Kallie Wallick 21:37, 13. Rebecca Hinderaker
22:22, 20. Alyssa Mente 22:49, 24. Alivia Edens 23:09, 33. Coryn Wallick 23:39, 55. Addie Nerem 25:37, 61. Alli Nash 26:13, 93. Nicole McDonald 30:17.
WILTON (202): 23. Charlotte Brown 23:02, 40. Hannah Rogers 24:10, 63. SeAnn Houghton 26:30, 65. Ava Barrett
26:37, 100. Ansley Boorn 31:44.
NORTH CEDAR (209): 28. Hunter Jones 23:28, 35. Kiley
Chapman 23:45, 89. Sarah Redhage 29:58, 99. Karly Cerda 31:19, 104. Jilliet Spahr 33:13.

Wilton tripped at home by Lisbon

 WILTON — The Wilton Beavers and Lisbon Lions are used to meeting on the wrestling mat each year, many times in the Regional dual meet, but last week, they met on the gridiron. The game was the last non-district contest for both teams. The original date of last Friday for the contest was delayed one-day until Saturday due to a player waiting on CoVid test results. The test results were not available for Friday’s game and they were for Saturday’s game and the two teams were able to play under a cool Saturday evening. There, the Lions escaped Wilton with a 26-20 win to improve to 2-0. The Lions were ranked No. 8 in the first Associated Press poll of the season in Class A.
 The Beavers had a tremendous start to the game with a 12-play drive where they marched 74-yards in just under five minutes and scored the games first points. A short touchdown pass from Caleb Sawvell to Caden Kirkman for 7 yards over the middle of the field gave Wilton the game’s first points and a 6-0 lead. That lead would hold as the first quarter ended, but the Lions were knocking on the door of the endzone as the second quarter began.
 On the first play of the second quarter, Lion quarterback Gavin Wollum ran for a 14-yard touchdown on a 3rd and 6 situation for the Lions.
 The score stood at 6-6 after Wilton blocked the PAT attempt. Wilton had to punt on their ensuing drive and pinned the Lions back to their own 8-yard line. Lisbon would fight though and get score on that drive capped by a big play, a 64-yard scoring run by Max Kohl to score the score at 12-6. On the next Wilton drive Lisbon took advantage of a tipped Caleb Sawvell pass to Colby Sawvell and intercepted the ball. Braden Gladwin returned the interception 35 yards for a touchdown to extend the Lions lead to 18-6. The points were part of an 18-0 scoring run in the quarter. Wilton would come back after a Lisbon punt. The Beavers took over at the 50-yard line where Caleb Sawvell connected with his brother Colby for a big play, a 49-yard pass to the Lions 1. Jackson Hull took the ball in from there to cut the Lions lead to 18-12. That would be the score at halftime.
 The Beavers forced a fumble early in the third quarter and had good field position at the Lions 36. Six plays late Caleb Sawvell rushed for a 5-yard touchdown to tie the game at 18. Sawvell then found Kirkman on a pass to convert the two-point conversion to give Wilton a 20-18 lead. Lisbon responded with a 14-play drive that ended in them taking the lead on a Wollum 7-yard pass to Will Bennett. The Jamien Moore 2-point conversion run gave Lisbon a 26-20 lead.
 The final quarter saw Wilton have chances to tie the game. Wilton crossed midfield twice, but turned the ball over three times in the final quarter. The Beavers had one interception and two turnovers on downs in the final quarter. The Beavers did have an impressive goal line stand late in the game, preventing Lisbon from scoring again.
 Caleb Sawvell passed for 185 yards and a touchdown on 16 completions and rushed for 20 yards and a touchdown. Colby Sawvell was the top Wilton receiver with five receptions for 97 yards. Caden
Kirkman had three catches for 34 yards and a touchdown. Colby Sawvell, the Beavers leading receiver, was injured in the game and did not return.
 Defensively, Keegan Stoelk had 19 tackles while Alex Kaufmann had 17, and Karson Willey 14.
The Beavers will play at Durant Friday for their district opener.
 

Lisbon 26, Wilton 20
At Wilton
Saturday, September 5
Quarter Scores:
Lisbon 0 18 8 0 26
Wilton 6 6 8 0 20

Scoring Summary:
1st Qtr - WIL - Caden Kirkman 7-yard pass from Caleb Sawvell (Caleb Sawvell run no good)
2nd Qtr - LIS - Gavin Wollum 14-yard run (PAT blocked)
2nd Qtr - LIS - Max Kohl 64-yard run (Gavin Wollum run no good)
2nd Qtr - LIS - Braden Gladwin 35-yard interception return (Gavin Wollum run no good)
2nd Qtr - WIL - Jackson Hull 1-yard run (Caleb Sawvell pass no good)
3rd Qtr - WIL - Caleb Sawvell 5-yard run (Caleb Sawvell pass to Caden Kirkman)
3rd Qtr - LIS - Will Bennett 7-yard pass from Gavin Wollum (Jamien
Moore run)

Individual Statistics:
Rushing: Lisbon - Max Kohl 16-121, Gavin Wollum 16-51, Jamien
Moore 12-38, Kaden Caspers 5-21. Wilton - Jackson Hull 14-20, Caleb Sawvell 11-20.
Passing: Lisbon - Gavin Wollum 2-for-5 20 yards, 1 TD, 0 INT’s. Wilton - Caleb Sawvell 16-for-28 185 yards, 1 TD, 3 INT’s.
Receiving: Lisbon - Will Bennett 2-20. Wilton - Colby Sawvell 5-97, Caden Kirkman 3-34, Jackson Hull 2-20, Clayton Guyer 2-15, Gage Rosenkild 2-15, Gavin Schnepper 2-13.

Defensive Statistics:
Tackles: Lisbon - Kaden Caspers 9.5, Cole Clark 6.5, Braden Gladwin 6, Max Kohl 4.5, Jamien Moore 4, Truman Krob 3, Braxton
Kurtenbach 3, Brant Baltes 3, Wyatt Smith 2.5, Will Bennett 2, Tyson Scott 1.5, Devyn Decious 1, Indy Harbaugh 1, Lincoln Hollub 0.5.
Wilton - Keegan Stoelk 19, Alex Kaufmann 17, Karson Willey 14, John Lilly 12, Kael Brisker 12, Tyrell Hughes 11, Gavin Schnepper
9, Christian Kleppe 6, Jackson Hull 4, Nolan Townsend 3, Gage Rosenkild 3, Clayton Guyer 2, Lesane Bitterman 2, Jacob Stone 1.
Fumbles: Lisbon - none. Wilton - Keegan Stoelk 1.
Interceptions: Lisbon - Braden Gladwin 2-36 yards, Will Bennett
1-0 yards. Wilton - none.

Kicking Statistics:
Kickoffs: Lisbon - Tyson Scott 4-175 yards, Braxton Kurtenbach
1-45 yards. Wilton - Alex Rae 4-137 yards. Wilton - Colby Sawvell 2-37, Gage Rosenkild 2-22, Jacob Stone 1-12.
Kick Returns: Lisbon - Braden Gladwin 1-43, Jamien Moore 1-20, Kaden Caspers 1-0.
Punts: Lisbon Truman Krob 4-112 yards. Wilton - Colby Sawvell 2-72 yards.
Punt Returns: Lisbon - none. Wilton - none.

Beavers dominate Regals in RVC opening match

 IOWA CITY — The Wilton volleyball team improved to 8-0 with a dominant 3-0 win in their River Valley Conference opener. The Beavers swept Iowa City Regina on their home court last Thursday. Wilton will be at Tipton on September 10.
 The Beavers trail in the overall series since 2008, 15-8, but with the win last week, the Beavers have won the last five matches against the Regals. Wilton won the first and second set in their match at Regina by scores of 25-16 each set to take a 2-0 match lead. The Beavers completed the sweep with a 25-15 third set win.
 Wilton had 47 kills in the match led by Carly Puffer with 13, Kelsey Drake with 12, and Alexa Garvin with 11. Ella Caffery had 32 assists in the match. Wilton served 68-for-74 with six aces as a team. Puffer led Wilton, serving 24-for-25 with two aces while Kelsey Drake was 14-for-14 and Peyton Souhrada was 13-for-14. The Beaves are currently ranked No. 4 in Class 2A.

Wilton 3, Iowa City Regina 0
Thursday, September 3
At Iowa City
Wilton 25 25 25
ICR 16 16 15
Wilton Statistics:
Attacks (100-for-117 47 kills): Kelsey Drake 25-for-29 12 kills, Alexa Garvin 24-for-28 11 kills, Carly Puffer 22-for-28 13 kills, Lauren Thompson 13-for-15 4 kills, Ella Caffery 12-for-13 6 kills, Kiley Langley 4-for-4 1 kill. Assists (33): Ella Caffery 32, Carly Puffer 1. Digs (70): Kelsey Drake 20, Mallory Lange 17, Alexa Garvin 14, Carly Puffer 10, Ella Caffery 5, Peyton Souhrada 2, Kiley Langley 2. Serving (68-for-74 6 aces): Carly Puffer 24-for-25 2 aces, Kelsey Drake 14-for-14 2 aces, Peyton Souhrada 13-for-14 1 ace, Alexa Garvin 7-for-8, Mallory Lange 6-for-7, Ella Caffery 4-for-6 1 ace.

Beavers Undefeated At English Valleys Tournament
 NORTH ENGLISH — The Wilton volleyball team swept their way through the English Valleys Tournament last Tuesday, September 1. The Beavers beat Central Lee, Columbus Junction, Keota, and English Valleys to improve to 7-0. The Beavers opened their season with a 3-0 sweep through teams at the Easton Valley Tournament on Saturday,
August 29.

Tigers Open 2020

 IOWA CITY — The Tipton boy’s cross-country team got their first meet of the season in last week in Iowa City. The Tigers ran at the annual Bob Brown cross-country classic on Thursday, September 3. There, Tipton placed third in the team race and had the overall meet champion. The Tigers will host their annual invitational Tuesday night.
 Tipton senior Caleb Shumaker won the race distancing himself from the pack early in the race. Shumaker won the race in a time of 16:46. Second place went to Bowen Gryp from Iowa City Liberty High School in 17:08. Liberty won the meet with 20 points while Tipton tied with Mount Vernon with 83 points. The Tigers 5th place runner however placed lower than the Mustangs’ fifth place runner.
 Two other Tigers finished in the top-20 finishers. Cody Bohlman placed 10th in 17:51 to give the Tigers two top-10 finishers. Ty Nichols placed 15th in 18:27 to give THS three top-20 finishers. Other Tipton finishers were Troy Butler 36th, A.J. Thumma 38th, Bob Ryan 46th, Kayden Rezac 65th, Brody
Deerberg 76th, Andy Shumaker 104th, Caleb Jedlicka 110th, Dalton McDonald 123rd, and Carson Glick 127th.
 Wilton scored 217 points and placed seventh at the meet. The Beavers were led by Jake Walton’s finish in 43rd place in 19:34. Only one other Wilton runner placed in the top-100 finishers and that was Ethan Bailey in 60th place in 20:28. Other Wilton finishers were Chayton Ramsey 103rd, Brody Brisker 135th, and Jacob Paulsen 152nd.
 North Cedar scored 238 team points and placed eighth at the meet. North Cedar was led by Sam Choate with a 72nd place nish in 20:49. David Redhage was next with 96th place nish in 21:42. Other North Cedar finishes were Jacob Spahr 120th, Marshall VanOort 149th, and Leighton Tjaden 158th.

Bob Brown Cross-Country Classic
Kicker’s Fields
Iowa City, Iowa
Thursday, September 3
Boy’s Team Results:
1. Iowa City Liberty 20, 2. Mount Vernon-Lisbon 83, 3. Tipton 83, 4. Solon 88, 5. Monticello 91, 6. Iowa City Regina 197, 7. Wilton 217, 8. North Cedar 238.
Top-10 Finishers:
1. Caleb Shumaker (T) 16:46, 2. Bowen Gryp (ICL) 17:08, 3. Christian Montover (ICL) 17:10, 4. Caleb Schillinger (ICL) 17:26, 5. Jack Kinzer (ICL) 17:38, 6. Gavin Keeney (ICL) 17:39, 7. Jasper Nietert (MONTI) 17:42, 8. Aidan Decker (ICL) 17:47, 9. Tyler Bilskie (S) 17:47, 10. Cody Bohlman (T) 17:51.
Team Results:
TIPTON (83): 1. Caleb Shumaker 16:46, 10. Cody Bohlman
17:51, 15. Ty Nicols 18:27, 36. Troy Butler 19:24, 38. A.J. Thumma 19:27, 46. Bob Ryan 19:42, 65. Kayden Rezac 20:36, 76. Brody Deerberg 21:00, 104. Andy Shumaker 22:04, 110. Caleb Jedlicka 22:29, 123. Dalton McDonald 23:09, 127. Carson Glick 23:22.
WILTON (217): 43. Jake Walton 19:34, 60. Ethan Bailey 20:28, 103. Chayton Ramsey 22:02, 135. Brody Brisker 24:04, 152. Jacob Paulsen 27:21.
NORTH CEDAR (238): 72. Sam Choate 20:49, 96. David Redhage
21:42, 120. Jacob Spahr 23:04, 149. Marshall VanOort 26:12, 158. Leighton Tjaden 30:12.

Tigers Fall To State Ranked Comets

 TIPTON — The Tipton Tigers hosted Class 3A No. 8 West Liberty to begin the 2020 season and their River Valley Conference season. There, the Comets were too much for the Tigers, sweeping the Tigers 3-0.
 The Tigers have a whole new lineup with only a couple players with any sort of varsity experience
back. The new group of Tigers struggled in the first set as West Liberty took a 1-0 match lead after winning the first set 25-5. The Tigers had glimpses of what is to come with mini rallys in each of the second and third sets. The Tigers fell 25-10 in the second set and 25-15 in the third set, scoring more points in each set as the match went one.
 Tipton had seven kills in the match led by Hailey Stewart, Rachel Bierman, and Avary Calonder with two each. Kelley Lieser had one-kill. Calonder led THS with four assists and Carly Langenburg had one assist.
 The Tigers had five digs in the match with Langenburg leading with two while Lieser, Bierman, and McKenna Gade each had one. Tipton served 26-for-31 with two aces. Langenburg was 7-for-7 to lead the Tigers. West Liberty had 37 kills in the match with junior Macy Daufeldt leading with 15 and senior
Martha Pace also reaching double digits with 11. Brooklyn Buysse had 32 assists. The Comets had 34 digs led by Monica Morales with eight while five others each had four digs. The Comets served 67-for-73 with 10 aces in the match. Macy Daufeldt was 19-for-20 with four aces and Isabel Morrison was 12-for-13 with an ace.
 Tipton is off until this Thursday when they travel to Class 2A No. 4 Wilton for their second
RVC match of the season. The Tigers are scheduled to play in Marion this Saturday at the Linn-Mar Invitational. Tipton will host Durant for parent’s night on Tuesday, September 15 and travel to North Cedar on Thursday, September 17.

Tigers Take On Two High Ranked Teams
 MOUNT VERNON — The first of four weekend tournaments saw the Tipton Tiger volleyball team take on two highly ranked squads and two other solid programs at last Saturday’s Shirley Ryan Invitational. The format for the tournament was changed with each team playing only their pool teams, instead of having bracket play after pool play like past years.
 The Tigers played four matches and lost all four. Two foes were highly ranked in Class 3A No. 1 Mount Vernon, and Class 4A No. 8 Waverly-Shell Rock. With the losses, the Tigers fell to 0-5 on the season.
 Tipton struggled to get points against the Mustangs as Mount Vernon beat the Tigers 21-2 and 21-5. Kelley Lieser and Rachel Bierman each had a kill in the match. Avary Calonder had four digs and Carly Langenburg had two. Calonder led THS in serving, going 3-for-3.
 The Tigers lost to Waverly-Shell Rock by twin scores of 21-7. Kelley Lieser had two kills and Bierman had one. Ashley Hatland had three assists. The Tigers served 14-for-14 with an ace. Hatland and Hailey Stewart each were 3-for-3. Stewart led Tipton in dits with six.
 The Tigers played Des Moines Christina tough before falling 2-0. Tipton nearly won the first set, falling 21-17 before the Lions beat Tipton 21-4 in the final set. The Tigers had 7 kills with Kelley Lieser and Hailey Stewart each with two. Avary Calonder
had four assists and Sydney Barton led THS with nine digs. The Tigers served 18-for-22 with two aces in the match. Calonder was 6-for-6 with an ace and Barton was 5-for-5 with an ace.
 The Tigers fell 21-7 and 21-8 to Iowa City West. Three Tigers had two kills each in Hailey
Stewart, Kelley Lieser, and Avary Holstein. Calonder had four assists and Stewart had six digs. The Tigers served 12-for-14 in the match. Calonder was 4-for-5 to lead the Tigers.

West Liberty 3, Tipton 0
Thursday, September 3
At Tipton
West Liberty 25 25 25
Tipton 5 10 15
Tipton Statistics:
Attacks (32-for-44 7 kills): Kelley Lieser 7-for-12 1kil, Avary Calonder 8-for-9 2 kills, Emma Hartman 5-for-6, Rachel Bierman 5-for-6 2 kills, Hailey Stewart 4-for-6 2 kills, Courtney Peterson 2-for-3, Liz Bierman 1-for-1, Carly Langenburg 0-for-1. Assists (5): Avary Calonder 4, Carly Langenburg 1. Digs (5): Carly Langenburg 2, Kelley Lieser 1, McKenna Gade 1, Rachel Bierman
1. Serving (26-for-31 2 aces): Carly Langenburg
7-for-7, Ashley Hatland 4-for-4, Hailey Stewart 4-for-4 2 aces, Sydney Barton 3-for-4, Avary Calonder 2-for-4, Kelley Lieser 3-for-3, McKenna Gade 0-for-1.

Tigers shuffle lineup at Clinton meet

 CLINTON — The Tipton swimming team made their second road trip in three days last week, traveling to Clinton on Thursday, September 3. This came after a meet in Williamsburg on Tuesday, September 1. At Clinton, the Tigers shuffled their line-up. The RiverQueens however, came up with the dual win, 85-78. The Tigers had one more meet last week, a Saturday trip to Muscatine for the Muskie Invitational.
 The Tigers shifted their 400-yard freestyle relay team of Maddie Swick, Kayley Clark, Zoe Stonebraker, and Rhyan Hoefler at the meet and put them in individual events instead.
 Swick won the 200-yard freestyle in 2:12.76, Hoefler won the 200-yard IM in 2:31.45, Clark won the 500-yard freestyle in 6:31.25, and Stonebraker won the 100-yard freestyle in 1:01.69. It was the first wins in those events for each of the quartet.
 Tipton’s lineup in the 400-yard freestyle relay had Meghan Vandergaast, Hannah Tucker, Bree Lemburg, and Alicia Beranek. The quartet placed second in a time of 5:19.08.
 The Tigers picked up five other event wins. In individual events, Zoe Stonebraker won the 50-yard freestyle in 27.38. Maddie Swick won the 100-yard butterfly in 1:04.82. Rhyan Hoefler won the 100-yard backstroke in 1:08.21.
 The Tigers won two relay events, the 200-yard medley relay and the 200-yard freestyle relay. The medley relay team of Hoefler, Clark, Swick, and Stonebraker won in a time of 2:06.00. The 200-yard free relay team of Swick, Clark, Hoefler, and Stonebraker won in 1:55.27.
 

Clinton 85, Tipton 78
Thursday, September 3
At Clinton, IA
Individual Event Results:
200-yard medley relay: 1. Tipton (Rhyan Hoefler, Kayley Clark, Maddie Swick, Zoe Stonebraker)
2:06.0, 2. Clinton 2:10.19, 3. Clinton 2:32.98, 3. Tipton (Alicia Beranek, Corrine Vandergaast,
Meghan Vandergaast, Bree Lemburg) 2:42.06.
200-yard freestyle: 1. Maddie Swick (T) 2:12.76, 2. Molly Shannon (C) 2:22.78, 3. Kayley Clark (T) 2:26.87, 4. Bree Lemburg (T) 2:50.30.
200-yard IM: 1. Rhyan Hoefler (T) 2:31.45, 3. Sarah Klinkhammer (C) 3:04.41.
50-yard freestyle: 1. Zoe Stonebraker (T) 27.38, 2. Sarah Hilgendorf (C) 30.27, 5. Anna Thomas (T) 41.80.
100-yard butterfly: 1. Maddie Swick (T) 1:04.82, 2. Jordyn Klinkhammer (C) 1:16.03.
100-yard freestyle: 1. Zoe Stonebraker (T) 1:01.69, 2. Sarah Hilgendorf (C) 1:08.23, 5. Hannah Tucker (T) 1:27.99, 6. Anna Thomas (T) 1:47.63.
500-yard freestyle: 1. Kayley Clark (T) 6:31.25, 3. Emily Frye (C) 7:43.0.
200-yard freestyle relay: 1. Tipton (Maddie Swick, Kayley Clark, Rhyan Hoefler, Zoe Stonebraker)
1:55.27, 2. Clinton 2:16.79, 4. Tipton (Bree Lemburg, Meghan Vandergaast, Hannah Tucker, Alicia Beranek) 2:27.30.
100-yard backstroke: 1. Rhyan Hoefler (T) 1:08.21, 2. Molly Shannon (C) 1:10.77, 4. Allicia Beranek (T) 1:29.05.

Tigers dominate in individual wins

 WILLIAMSBURG — The Tipton swimming team made the first of two trips to Williamsburg this season to compete in a dual meet with the Raiders. There, the Tigers dominated in winning events, taking first place in eight of the eleven events at the meet, but the Raiders used their overall depth to take the team title, 106 to 64. The Raiders sported their biggest roster in many, many years at the meet, doubling the roster THS had at the meet. Being able to put two or three entries in an event was troublesome for the Tigers who could not. The meet was the first of three meets last week for THS.
Tipton won all three relay events at the meet. The Tigers won the 200-yard medley in 2:04.37, the 200-yard free relay in 1:53.25, and the 400-yard free relay in 4:12.78. The quartet of Maddie Swick, Kayley
Clark, Zoe Stonebraker, and Rhyan Hoefler were all a part of the first place relay events.
 Individually, freshman Avary Calonder collected a pair of wins in the 100-yard freestyle in 1:01.95 and the 100-yard backstroke in 1:10.61. Other THS wins came from Rhyan Hoefler in the 200-yard freestyle in 2:16.17, Zoe Stonebraker in the 50-yard freestyle in 27.47, and Maddie Swick in the 100-yard butterfly in 1:04.45.
 The Tigers had two other top-3 finishers in individual races. Senior Kayley Clark was second
in the 500-yard freestyle in 6:32.41 and Alicia Beranek was third in the 200-yard freestyle in 2:44.21. Clark shaved 13 seconds off of her seed time and Beranek trimmed ten seconds off her seed time.

 Raider Swimming Duals

Tuesday, September 1
At Williamsburg, IA
Team Scores: 1. Williamsburg 106, 2. Tipton 64
Individual Event Results (Top-3 and THS results
only):
200-yard medley relay: 1. Tipton (Rhyan Hoefler, Kayley Clark, Maddie Swick, Zoe Stonebraker)
2:04.37, 2. Williamsburg (Bowman, Carrico,
DeWitt, Hennes) 2:07.20, 4. Tipton (Avary Calonder, Meghan Vandergaast, Hannah Tucker,
Alicia Beranek) 2:31.51.
200-yard freestyle: 1. Rhyan Hoefler (T) 2:16.17, 2. Cassie Parsons (W’burg) 2:42.80, 3. Alicia Beranek (T) 2:44.21.
200-yard IM: 1. Malina Bowman (W’burg) 2:40.86, 2. Makena Yelland (W’burg) 2:41.89, 3. Amina DeWitt (W’burg) 2:41.93, 4. Meghan Vandergaast
(T) 3:10.06.
50-yard freestyle: 1. Zoe Stonebraker (T) 27.47, 2. Katy Rotter (W’burg) 28.65, 3. Katie Carrico (W’burg) 28.68, 7. Bree Lemburg (T) 35.07, 9. Anna Thomas (T) 40.69, 10. Maria Carrion
(T) 58.81.
100-yard butterfly: Maddie Swick (T) 1:04.45, 2. Amina DeWitt (W’burg) 1:12.60, 3. Malina Bowman (W’burg) 1:15.39, 6. Hannah Tucker (T) 1:42.20.
100-yard freestyle: 1. Avary Calonder (T) 1:01.95, 2. Katy Rotter (W’burg) 1:04.11, 3. Laura
Carrico (W’burg) 1:14.48, 6. Anna Thomas (T) 1:40.59, 7. Maria Carrion (T) 2:16.78.
500-yard freestyle: 1. Kathryn Hennes (W’burg) 6:25.51, 2. Kayley Clark (T) 6:32.41, 3. Emma Peters (W’burg) 7:39.17.
200-yard freestyle relay: 1. Tipton (Maddie Swick, Kayley Clark, Rhyan Hoefler, Zoe Stonebraker)
1:53.25, 2. Williamsburg (Caron, DeWitt, Yelland, Rotter) 1:55.99, 3. Williamsburg (Fairchild,
Parsons, Carrico, Yearian) 2:10.87. DQ - Tipton (Alicia Beranek, Bree Lemburg, Meghan Vandergaast, Avary Calonder) DQ.
100-yard backstroke: 1. Avary Calonder (T) 1:10.61, 2. Caitlyn Cronbaugh (W’burg) 1:20.12, 3. Olivia Caron (W’burg) 1:20.58, 6. Alicia Beranek
(T) 1:32.61.
100-yard breaststroke: 1. Katie Carrico (W’burg) 1:18.21, 2. Makena Yelland (W’burg) 1:21.63, 3. Lilly Fairchild (W’burg) 1:32.91, 5. Corrine Vandergaast (T) 1:39.09, 8. Bree Lemburg
(T) 2:04.90.
400-yard freestyle relay: 1. Tipton (Maddie Swick, Kayley Clark, Zoe Stonebraker, Rhyan Hoefler) 4:12.78, 2. Williamsburg (Bowman, Hennes, Cronbaugh, Caron) 4:37.89, 3. Williamsburg
(Carrico, Yearian, Parsons, Dermody) 5:05.58.

Tigers collect 470 rushing yards in win

 TIPTON — The Tipton Tigers collected 470 yards rushing yards in their 2020 home opener and in doing so earned a 47-28 win over Class 3A Mount Pleasant last Friday. The Tigers win was their first of the season after falling in week one to Class 1A state ranked West Branch. The Tigers open district play Friday at Camanche. The Tigers are 8-2 in their last ten games with the Indians, including winning the last four games when they have scored at least 40 points in each victory.
 The Tigers took control of the game in the first quarter, scoring touchdowns on their first two possessions. The Tigers marched 65 yards in eight plays on their opening drive that saw the first of seven touchdowns scored in the game on a 6-yard Levi Daniel touchdown run. A Payten Elijah 2-point conversion run gave THS an 8-0 lead three minutes into the game.
 After a defensive stop, the Tigers used a quick strike drive. Nearly less than two minutes Tipton already had a score and forced a three and out on the Panthers first drive. Tipton then got a big play from senior Payten Elijah who scampered 75 yards down the far sideline for the second THS score and a 14-0 lead. Elijah and Daniel for that matter were the beneficiaries of tremendous blocking from offensive linemen - Skylar Schmidt, Nile Schuett, Austin Hubler, Jack Boldt, and Riley Keil - as well as fullback Lake Anderson. The Panther line was much bigger than the biggest Tigers in both size and moveability. The Tiger line opened up a gap big enough for a truck to drive through and Elijah found it, using his blazing
speed to find the endzone.
 With the score 14-0 after the first quarter, Tipton extended their lead to 21-0 on the first play of the second quarter when Daniel scored from 6-yards out and Eli Jauron kicked the PAT. The three score lead wouldn’t last forever as the Panthers would score twice before halftime to trim Tipton’s lead to 21-14 at halftime. The Panthers would tie the score in the third quarter at 21 when they took the first drive of the second half downfield. Quarterback Jack Johnson connected with Brevin Wilson for a 16-yard scoring strike and his second touchdown pass of the game to tie the game. Tipton would quickly answer to retake the lead on the ensuing drive. Another big run by Elijah, this one for 67 yards, gave THS a 27-21 lead. Later in the quarter,
 Daniel scored his third rushing touchdown of the game from 11 yards out to give Tipton a two score, 35-21 lead. Before the quarter ended however, the Panthers would cut the Tiger lead to seven when Johnson went back to Wilton for a big 68-yard touchdown pass to set the score at 35-28 after three quarters.
 In the final quarter, Tipton had worn the Panthers out, and were able to punch in two more touchdowns. An Elijah 29-yard run with 4:52 left in the game and a Daniel 11-yard scoring run with 2:58 left put the game away.
 Tipton had two rushers top the 100-yard mark for the first time this season. In 2019, THS accomplished
it twice, both were victories. Payten Elijah led eight Tigers with carries in the game with 235 yards on 15 carries and three touchdowns.
 Levi Daniel rushed for 160 yards on 23 carries and scored four touchdowns. All seven THS scores were on the ground. Carter Hill and Caden Schmidt chipped in 42 and 34 yards. Elijah passed for 12 yards and Lake Anderson caught one pass for 12 yards. Defensively, Tipton was led in tackles by Carson Charves with 5.5 and Levi Daniel and Kaleb Nerem who each had 4.5 tackles. Caden Schmidtt also had a key second half interception that he returned 45 yards to set up THS on their final scoring drive.
 Mount Pleasant senior quarterback Jack Johnson had 280 yards of total offense with 231 passing and 49 rushing yards. Last week in the Panthers 28-27 win over Clear Creek-Amana Johnson had 137 yards passing and rushed for 193 yards and three touchdowns. Four Panther receivers had at least two receptions. Against the Tigers, three Panthers had three or more catches led by Chase Williamson with four for 71 yards. Defensively, Jack Johnson led in tackles with 10 and Klayton Kleinkopf with 7.5 tackles.
 The Tigers open district play this Friday when they travel to Camanche. Last year the Tigers beat the Indians 48-13 in a game that started a four-game win streak and set the Tigers up for a winner-take all game with West Liberty in week nine. Junior Mike Delzell has passed for 358 yards. Cade Everson is the leading rusher with 347 yards and four touchdowns. Jordan Lawrence is the leading receiver with eleven receptions for 132 yards and one touchdown.

Game Statistics:
MP TIP
Pass C-A-I 11-26-1 2-9-2
Pass yards 231 15
Rush att-ave. 27-3.1 54-8.7
Rush yards 83 470
Kick returns-ave. 8-24.6 3-20.7
Return yards 187 62
Punt ave. 39.1 39.3

Quarter Scores:
Mt. Pleasant 0 14 14 0 28
Tipton 14 7 14 12 47

Scoring Summary:
1st Qtr - (8:59) TIP - Levi Daniel 6-yard run (Payten Elijah run)
1st Qtr - (6:39) TIP - Payten Elijah 75-yard run (Levi Daniel run no good)
2nd Qtr - (11:55) TIP - Levi Daniel 6-yard run (Eli Jauron kick)
2nd Qtr - (7:21) MP - Isaiah Albright 5-yard run (Brady Hall kick)
2nd Qtr - (1:01) MP - Avery Scandridge 40-yard pass from Jack Johnson (Brady Hall kick)
3rd Qtr - (10:28) MP - Brevin Wilson 16-yard yard pass from Jack Johnson (Brady Hall kick)
3rd Qtr - (9:21) TIP - Payten Elijah 67-yard run (PAT no good)
3rd Qtr - (2:43) TIP - Levi Daniel 11-yard run (Carter Hill pass to Levi Daniel)
3rd Qtr - (2:22) MP - Brevin Wilson 68-yard yard pass from Jack Johnson (Brady Hall kick)
4th Qtr - (4:52) TIP - Payten Elijah 29-yard run (Eli Jauron kick no good)
4th Qtr - (2:58) TIP - Levi Daniel 11-yard run (Eli Jauron kick no good)

Individual Statistics:
Rushing: Mount Pleasant - Jack Johnson 16-49, Avery Scandridge 5-18, Klayton Kleinkopf 5-11, Isaiah Albright 1-5. Tipton - Levi Daniel 23-160, Payten Elijah 15-235, Carter Hill 7-42, Caden Schmidt 3-34, Lake Anderson 3-8, Brandon Hines 1-3, Eli Jauron 1-1, Conner Christian 1-0.
Passing: Mount Pleasant - Jack Johnson 11-for-26 231 yards, 3 TD’s, 1 INT. Tipton - Payten Elijah 1-for-8 12 yards, 0 TD’s, 2 INT’s; Carter Hill 1-for-1 3 yards, 0 TD’s, 0 INT’s.
Receiving: Mount Pleasant - Chase Williamson 4-71, Brevin Wilson 3-93, Avery Scandridge 3-45, Brennen Nender 1-22. Tipton - Lake Anderson 1-12, Levi Daniel 1-3.

Defensive Statistics:
Tackles: Mount Pleasant - Jack Johnson 10, Klayton Kleinkopf 7.5, Chase Williamson 5.5, Cole Jarrett 5, Dylon Hagans 5, Brady Hall 4.5, Levi Graber 4.5, Lincoln Henriksen 2.5, Brennen Bender 2.5, Isaiah Albright 2, Chase Adams 2, Cooper Pullis 2, Carson Coleman 1.5, Mitchell Moothart 1.5, Chayse Irving 1, Henry Lutovsky 0.5, Jack Schimmelpfennig 0.5.
Tipton - Carson Charves 5.5, Levi Daniel 4.5, Kaleb Nerem 4.5, Austin Hubler 4, Skyler Schmidt 4, Payten Elijah 3, Caden Schmidt 3, Nile Schuett 2, Jack Boldt 2, Carter Hill 2, Lake Anderson 1.5, Conner Christian 1.5, Grady Glick 1, Cole Kime 1, Damian McCoy 0.5, Brandon Valet 0.5, Hayden Copp 0.5.
Sacks: Mount Pleasant - none. Tipton - Nile Schuett 0.5, Jack Boldt 0.5, Lake Anderson 0.5, Levi Daniel 0.5.
Tackles For Loss: Mount Pleasant - Cooper Pullis 1. Tipton - Carson Charves 1, Levi Daniel 0.5, Lake Anderson 0.5, Skyler Schmidt 0.5, Jack Boldt 0.5, Austin Hubler 0.5, Nile Schuett 0.5.
Fumbles: none.
Interceptions: Mount Pleasant - Dylon Hagans 1, Brevin Wilson 1. Tipton - Caden Schmidt 1-45.

Kicking Statistics:
Kicking: Mount Pleasant - Brady Hall 4-192. Tipton - Eli Jauron 8-397
Kick Returns: Mount Pleasant - Chase Williamson 8-197. Tipton - Caden Schmidt 2-45, Griffin Naderman 1-17.
Punts: Mount Pleasant - Avery Scandridge 7-274, 39.1-yard ave., Tipton - Payten Elijah 2-82, 41.0-ave.

Wildcats Collect Second Win, Move To 2-0

 LETTS — The Durant Wildcats are making waves in Class 1A this season in the first two weeks of the 2020 season. Last Friday, the Wildcats won 49-0 to have their second shutout win to start the 2020 season. The Wildcats won 41-0 over North Cedar in week 1. The Wildcats improved to 2-0 and will host Wilton to begin district play Friday night. Last season, Durant snapped a lengthy losing streak to the Beavers, winning in Wilton 24-0 in 2019. The Wildcats beat the Falcons for the first time in four meetings. The Falcons hold a 3-2 record over Durant in their last five meetings.
 Durant had their second shutout to begin 2020 and are one of only two Class 1A teams that have not been scored on this year. The Wildcats also narrowly are the second highest scoring team in 1A with only two games played with 90 points. Woodward-Granger is tops in Class 1A with 91 points. Cardinal of Eldon had three games played and are over 100 points scored this season so far.
 Sophomore running back Nolan DeLong continues to turn heads in the state. Through two games, DeLong has rushed for 542 yards on 34 carries for a state leading 15.9-yard average and nine touchdowns.
 His scoring total and rushing yard total are second in the state of Iowa for any class. He is one of two sophomores in the state leaders top-10 and one of three in the top-20 rushers in the state. Friday, DeLong collected four touchdowns and rushed for 299 yards on 25 carries. All four of his touchdowns came in the second half of the game. In essence, DeLong outscored the Falcons by himself in the second half.
 The Wildcats led 21-0 at halftime and scored 28 second half points in the win. Shockingly, it took some time for Durant to get their offense going. The Wildcats had a three and out situation on their first possession and after holding the Falcons, prepared to start their second drive, but a fumbled punt turned the football over to Louisa-Muscatine. Durant held and on their third possession scored. Quarterback  Keagen Head rushed 32 yards down the far sideline for the first points and a 6-0 lead. The Wildcats defense held again, and Durant took advantage of good field position to take a 14-0 lead. Another big play courtesy of Head accounted for the second Durant touchdown, a 63-yard bomb from head to receiver Ethan Gast. A Head two-point conversion run set the score at 14-0 after the first quarter.
Durant’s next drive went for 12 plays, but produced no points as Durant drove to the Falcons 20-yard line, but turned the ball over on downs. Durant would not make the same mistake again as on their next drive, Head connected on a scoring pass to Tony Dillabough for 28 yards and a 21-0 lead.
 Durant would score on all four of their offensive possessions in the second half. There, the 35-point mercy rule, running clock was activated as well. DeLong rushed for touchdowns of 10 and 28 yards in the third quarter and 51 and 28 yards in the fourth quarter for the Wildcats. The scores extended Durant’s lead to 35-0 after three quarters and 49-0 for the game.
 Head had a good game as well from his quarterback position. Head threw for 124 yards and two touchdowns and rushed for 86 yards and one touchdown. Ethan Gast and Tony Dillabough
each had one reception that went for a touchdown. Defensively, Durant was led in tackles by DeLong with 5.5 and Gast with 5.

Durant 49, Louisa-Musatine 0
Friday, September 4
At Letts

Quarter Scores:
Durant 14 7 14 14 49
L+M 0 0 0 0 0

Scoring Summary:
1st Qtr - DUR - Keagen Head 32-yard run (Logan Wolf kick no good)
1st Qtr - DUR - Ethan Gast 63-yard pass from Keagen Head (Keagen Head run)
2nd Qtr - DUR - Tony Dillabough 28-yard pass from Keagen Head (Logan Wolf kick)
3rd Qtr - DUR - Nolan DeLong 10-yard run (Logan Wolf kick)
3rd Qtr - DUR - Nolan DeLong 28-yard run (Logan Wolf kick)
4th Qtr - DUR - Nolan DeLong 51-yard run (Logan Wolf kick)
4th Qtr - DUR - Nolan DeLong 28-yard run (Logan Wolf kick)

Individual Statistics (Durant Only):
Rushing: Nolan DeLong 25-299, Keagen Head 11-86, Tevin Miller 3-12.
Passing: Keagen Head 4-for-10 124 yards, 2 TD’s, 0 INT’s.
Receiving: Ethan Gast 1-62, Tony Dillabough 1-28, Ben Orr 1-24, Nolan DeLong 1-10.

Defensive Statistics (Durant Only):
Tackles: Nolan DeLong 5.5, Ethan Gast 5, Tysen McKinley 4, Cameron Ruggiero 3.5, Tony Dillabough 2.5, Bryce Czarnetzki 2, Hunter Bacorn 1.5, Keagan Head 1.5, Carter Wichelt 1.5, Brady Meincke 1, Elliott Fortin 1, Tevin Miller 1, Ben Orr 1, Brian Graves 1, Charlie Huesmann 0.5.
Sacks: Nolan DeLong 1.
Tackles For Loss: Nolan DeLong 2.5, Ton Dillabough 2, Ethan Gast 1.5, Hunter Bacorn 0.5, Cameron Ruggiero 0.5, Tysen McKinley 0.5.
Fumbles: Brian Graves 1.
Interceptions: 1-20 yards.

Kicking Statistics:
Kicking: Logan Wolf 8-352 yards.
Kick Returns: Carter Wichelt 1-19 yards.
Punts: Ben Orr 1-39.
Punt Returns: Ethan Gast 1-2 yards.