Knights Knock Off Trinity
By: Alex Mathis
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
It had been a total of 20 days since the Knights last took the field in Atlanta against powerhouse Wesleyan.
The Knights went into unfamiliar territory against Wesleyan but played hard the entire game. Turnovers cost the Knights in that game and that would be the last game they would play for a while because Hurricane Irma would put a halt on the Knights’ season.
When the Frederica Knights evacuated their campus, they did not know what they would come back to. Nor when they would be allowed to be back on campus.
Just last year the Knights were in this same position when Hurricane Matthew decided to wreak havoc on St. Simons Island. This year, Hurricane Irma would cause the Knights to cancel their games against Valwood and Memorial Day School.
Luckily, this year Frederica Academy only suffered minor damage. A bent goal post and a few missing lights would be all the damage dished out from Irma. Frederica got back to some normalcy when they resumed practice on Monday
Brandon Derrick’s Knights started out fast against the Trinity Christian Crusaders. The defense came out and forced a punt. The Knights ensuing drive stalled as well, but the Knights got a great punt from John Mitchell Brock and pinned the Crusaders inside the 5.
The Frederica defense, led by stud linebacker Harry Veal, made another great stand and forced a punt.
The first score of the game for the Knights came with a Jaylin Simpson scamper into the endzone. The next offensive possession saw Jaylin Simpson connecting with Jashawn Sheffield for a big pass down the center of the field. The Knights finished the half with scores from Isaiah Jackson and a huge catch from Harry Veal from Jaylin Simpson.
Frederica went in at halftime up 21 points and with over 200 yards of offense. The defense held the Crusaders to only 53 yards of offense.
Coach Derrick’s and Burkett’s goal defensively this week was to stuff the run and they did a great job in the first half doing that. The Crusaders struggled to find running lanes in their Wing-T offense.
Offensively, Coach Derrick’s goal was to be efficient and move the ball down the field to score and score often. They were able to do that in the first half.
The long 20 day break without playing a game seemed to show in the second half. Frederica struggled on offense to start the half.
Jaylin Simpson fumbled on the first offense possession in the second half. That fumble led to the Crusaders first score as they scooped and scored.
The Knights got another big play on defense from Avery Cobb. Cobb intercepted a pass from Trinity’s quarterback and sprinted through the Crusaders defenders for a pick 6.
After this spectacular play, the Knights struggled to stop the passing game of the Crusaders. Trinity Christian amassed 250 yards of offense in the 4th quarter but this was not enough to beat the Knights.
Isaiah finished the night with 188 yards rushing and Simpson had 196 all-purpose yards.
Harry Veal played lights out on defense. Veal is one of the best linebackers in Southeast Georgia and he showed that on Friday.
The offensive and defensive lines also played great on the night. The offensive line helped pave the way for almost 300 yards of rushing offence. The defensive line did a great job stuffing the run and pressuring the quarterback as well.
Next week the Knights will travel to play Pinewood. The winner of the Frederica versus Pinewood game traditionally goes on to win the region. The Knights look to go 2-0 next week.
Pirates Sink South Effingham
By: Kipp Branch
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
Something unexpected happened to the Brunswick High Pirates last night at Glynn County Stadium a Friday night kick-off. The 2017 All Weather Pirates played on a beautiful Friday night and routed the South Effingham Mustangs 44-13.
The Pirates jumped out to a 21-0 first quarter lead and never looked back.
Pirate Report Card:
Special Teams: B+. Dalton Thrift gets better every week. His 34-yard field goal at the halftime buzzer is something that BHS may need come playoff time.
Kick coverage has been solid all year. Only thing that kept this grade from being an A was a botched extra point attempt in the 3rd quarter. This area is much improved from 2016 where the kick-off coverage was terrible. Brunswick need this unit in a big game down the road.
Defense: A. This unit was solid all night long.
Jaylen King had a nice game. George Mincey continued his all-region play. Sean Ward and Kam Futch flew around all night long.
The coaching staff worked on some new blitz packages and caused a lot of issues for the Mustangs.
This unit is fast and causes problems for opposing teams with speed. BHS played some reserves in second half and gave up a few yards with a running clock in 4th quarter. It was the second straight game where this unit did not give up a first half point.
Offense: B+. Other than the pick 6 on a screen pass deep in Pirate territory, this unit did pretty much what they wanted to do all night long. The offensive line of Ty Hinson, TJ Kirkland, Brett Hall, John Cano, and Warren McClendon blew holes in the Mustang corral all night long.
It was also the Jamarius Stevens show on offense. The senior QB was 15-for-23, throwing for 244 yards and 3 touchdowns.
The senior also led the Pirates in rushing, rushing the rock 10 times for 118 yards and 3 touchdowns. Alonzo Brown had another 100-yard receiving day; his 4th in a row.
This unit worked on game plan type plays and did not take a real deep shot in passing game all night long.
Coaching: A. The game plan was solid with future games in mind and worked on consistently driving the football down field without going for quick strikes. No let down from the drought ending Camden win.
Overall: A-. Nice solid win over a team that you should beat 10 out of 10 times you play. The Pirates came out and took care of business.
Brunswick will have a bye week next week, then the undefeated Bradwell Tigers roll between the bricks on October 6th for region opener. The Pirates stand at 3-1 on the season.
Clemson: Best Team In College Football?
By: Kenneth Harrison Jr.
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
After the first few weeks of the college football season some questions have already been answered. We’re beginning to separate the contenders from the pretenders. One of the teams that has surprised me is Clemson. I think the Tigers might be the best team in the nation.
We’re aware that they’ve played against Alabama in the national championship game the previous two years. They came very close in 2015 but they found redemption and won it all in 2016.
Georgia Best In SEC East?
By: JJ Lanier
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
At the beginning of the season the SEC was shaping up to be a three headed monster.
You had Georgia, Florida, and possibly Tennessee, all favored at one point or another to contend for the division title.
I know we’re only three weeks in and things can change quicker than the cast of All My Children but right now it feels obvious that Georgia is separating itself from the rest of the pack.
Pirates Sail Past Camden
By: Kipp Branch
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
After a 16 day lay off due to Hurricane Irma the Brunswick High Pirates got back into action on a hot steamy afternoon at Chris Gilman Stadium in Kingsland and beat the Camden County Wildcats 43-27.
The game was therapeutic for the Pirate nation and Glynn County as playing football again meant a return to normalcy regardless of the outcome of the football game.
NFC South: Best In Football
By: JJ Lanier
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
Go ahead and stop me if you’ve heard this before: everything in the NFL is cyclical. I know, it’s been more times than Stephen A. Smith yells about someone having the “unmitigated gall”, but it’s also extremely accurate.
Five years ago the NFC West was a disaster. Two years ago it was the toughest division in football. This year the entire division, outside of Seattle, will be as inept as the Florida Gator offense.
The past few years the NFC South hasn’t had much to brag about. Obviously, the last two NFC representatives in the Super Bowl have come from the division, which is certainly nothing to sneeze at; it’s just that there hasn’t been much else to get excited about.
That should change this year as the South looks to be the toughest division in the NFC, if not the entire NFL. (The AFC West may have something to say about that last part).
Rays Still Swimming
By: TJ Hartnett
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
From 2008 to 2013, the Rays were a consistently good team. They made the playoffs in four of those six years, including a World Series berth against the eventual champs, the Phillies in 2008.
In the three seasons since, it has been a rougher go for Tampa Bay. This year appears like it may shake out no differently. They’re too far back in the division to be anything other than a headache to the Red Sox and Yankees ahead of them, both of which have been holding onto playoffs slots for dear life.
However, that doesn’t mean that Tampa should be written off completely. They are in the hunt for the second wild card spot. They have two teams between them and, at the moment, Minnesota.
They just need to scrap and fight and claw and, of course, win. They also need to stay healthy. Middle of the season injuries to Colby Rasmus and Kevin Kiermaier have crippled the team’s potential in 2017.
They also need to play at least to their base level. Evan Longoria in particular needs to reach a consistent level of production in September for this snowball in hell not to melt.
The second wild card has changed the game so much (for the better), making teams that would be done for the year still competitive this late in the season. Having two wild card spots keeps so many clubs in the hunt and it alone is keeping the Rays’ ambitions alive.
It’s still not an entirely likely scenario; Tampa reaching that wild card game, since they’ll have to leapfrog three teams to get in but it’s not impossible.
Unfortunately, it leaves a lot in the hands of those three clubs. They need to lose while Tampa wins. On the bright side, the Angels are the only team ahead of the Rays that they don’t play in September.
Tampa hosts the Twins starting on Monday as well as playing a road and a home series against Baltimore in the coming weeks. They’ll have to make strong statements in those 9 games and by that I pretty much mean win ALL of them. Then pray those teams lose some more to others as well.
For the sake of covering all that there is to cover, the Rays also have a road series and a home series against the team currently holding the first wild card spot; the division rival Yankees.
Now this doesn’t mean that they’ve got a shot at getting to that first spot (though mathematically they of course do), but it is another team with a better record that they’ll need to play well against to not dash those playoff dreams.
Basically, they’ve got a lot of sway in their own destiny. Not as much as I’m sure they would like, but with 16 games against teams ahead of them in the standings, the schedule couldn’t do much more for them.
At the end of the day, they are still a long shot for a playoff spot but it’s a position they’ve thrived in before. Even during that six year run where they were consistently contending, they seemed to constantly either have their back against the wall or just flat out get overlooked. Overlooking this team could spell doom for their opponents.
Tampa is always the underdog and that’s the role they shine in. Their incredible game 162 in 2011, coming back from 7-0 to win in 12 innings stands as a testament to what this team has accomplished with their back against the wall.
That certainly is the case as September baseball gets underway in 2017. So, Tampa, what have you got to show us this year?
Tift Too Much For Glynn
By: Christian Goeckel
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
Glynn Academy’s week 3 loss to Tift County, 27-7, can be summarized into one word: Until.
The Terrors were moving the ball up and down the field, until they turned it over, when Randon Jernigan was strip sacked on Tift’s 29.
They had picked up a crucial third down, until they came up a yard short and failed on the fourth down conversion.
The defense held 4-star receiver Rashod Bateman in check, until they didn’t, when they seemingly forgot the Minnesota commit was on the field and he walked into to the endzone for an 80-yard score.
One thing remains true in football across all levels; When you face good teams, you can’t give up the ball. Glynn is a young team that is still trying to find its footing and it seems to have a propensity for coughing up the football. In an offense that puts the ball in a lot of people’s hands, like the option does, that’s catastrophic,
Tift County entered this game with a dominant defense (giving up 4.7 points per game). Much like Benedictine, Tift loaded the box all night. Glynn’s triple option, dominant last week against Ware, was held under 70 yards on the night. Caine Crews lead the way with 33 yards on 15 carries (2.2 ypc).
For the second week in a row, Glynn only completed two passes. One, a 60 yarder to Andrew Delaney, setup the Terrors’ only score.
If Glynn has any playoff aspirations they must find a passing game. Teams will continue to load the box until Jernigan can prove that he can beat them over the top. Jernigan shouldn’t shoulder all the blame, though. His line rarely gives him time to move off his first look, and his receivers can’t consistently beat their men.
Defensively, the team played well minus a couple of big plays. Tift quarterback Griffin Collier gashed the Terrors’ defense on the second play of the game for a 74-yard touchdown and found receiver Rashod Bateman for the aformentioned 80-yard bomb.
Tift had a clear game plan: Get up early and ride our defense. The Blue Devils, a pass heavy offense, threw the ball only 21 times for 198 yards. Tift felt they could shut down Glynn, so why get risky?
Glynn finds themselves at an interesting place. Again, it can’t be understated that this team is hurt, but they’re getting healthier every week.
Yet, every week the offense becomes more one dimensional. They must choose now if they open the offense up, or continue to pound the rock and trust the system.
We’ll get to see what they choose next week when they take on Camden County at Glynn County Stadium. Camden is coming off an extremely solid come from behind win at home against Fitzgerald and will look to improve their record to 3-1 when they take on the Terrors.
This is a tough match up for Glynn. Camden is another team that rides their great defense. In what should be a low scoring game, the difference will biggest factor will be Glynn’s ability or inability to hold on to the ball. Camden will pounce on any mistake you make.
Glynn is 1-2, and largely looking for consistency before region play begins. A win over a good team like Camden would not only bring the Terrors back to .500, it would be a huge confidence boost for a team that needs it.
Glynn Academy vs Camden County kicks off at 7:30 at Glynn County Stadium on Friday, September 8th.
Pirates Blast Cook
By: Kipp Branch
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
The All Weather Brunswick High Pirates playing their second game in five days drilled the Cook County Hornets 53-7 in a strange game. The 2017 season so far has been marked by weather delays. Bad weather caused two delays in Thursday night’s contest.
The Pirates rolled up 415 yards of total offense in only 27 minutes of action. With a running clock in second half after being up 47-7 at the half the Pirates immediately scored to make it 53-7 and Cook threw the towel in with 9:42 left in the third quarter.
Pirate Report Card:
Offense: A+: How could it have been better? The Pirates had 20 points in 4 offensive plays in the first three minutes of the game and 156 yards.
Jamarius Stevens had the game of his life as a Brunswick High Pirate. Stevens played the first half only and was 11-13 for 310 yards and 6 TD’s. He also had a 4-yard rushing TD.
Jaylen Jackson had three TD’s in his first game playing just offense including a great 75-yard TD catch off his shoe top and just ran away from Cook defenders.
The OL blew holes in the Cook defensive line and just mauled them for 27 minutes until Cook threw in the white towel.
Shaq Robinson had another good night running the football. DJ Whitfield and Alonzo Brown had long TD receptions. This WR group is talented and fast and when the entire group is clicking then opposing defenses have to man up and cover each one on one and that is what the air raid offense is all about.
Defense: A: This unit caused Cook problems all night long with the speed at LB. Sharrod Frazier and Kam Futch flew around all night long.
The game plan was solid and the run defense was dominant. Cook had one 36-yard TD drive after a long kickoff return. Defensive lineman George Mincey ran down a Cook punter on a fake punt and prevented a first down on a great hustle play when the game was well in hand.
The Pirates packed 9 men in the box to stop the Cook single wing offense and completely smothered the Cook rushing attack.
The speed on this defense will cause problems for teams later on the schedule. This unit will continue to get better.
Special Teams: B: The weather was not good. The ball was wet and the unit had a high snap on an extra point, which BHS did not convert. The unit gave up a long kickoff return but Sean Ward made a highlight reel body slam hit on a Cook player on one kickoff return.
Dalton Thrift kicked the ball deep to around the 10 yard line on kickoffs. His leg may be sore today as BHS kicked off seven times in the contest. It was a big turnaround from the Coffee game.
Coaching: A+: This team was ready to play and the game plan went right at Cook and the Hornets folded early.
The passing game was phenomenal, which opened up running lanes. The defense was striking hard, and the effort was there by the players in a short week due to the game time being moved up 24 hours. Sean Pender said the biggest improvement would be from game one to game two and he was correct.
On a wet night, no turnovers meant that ball security issues from the Coffee game were addressed and coached up in practice. Great plan and execution by players and that reflects solid coaching.
Overall: A: Total team effort to come out and dominate a team that is used to making the playoffs in their classification. BHS made a team quit and go home. Enough said.
The Cook radio broadcast team told me post game that the Brunswick team is by far the best team they have seen this year. This is a team that has played Lee County, Brooks County, and Tift County all highly thought of teams around the State.
Up Next: Wayne County in Jesup. That game is going to be tough. Wayne County beat Valdosta in Bazemore-Hyder Thursday night 23-13.
ACC Coastal Week 1 Preview
By: Kenneth Harrison Jr.
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
It’s my favorite time of year again, football season. Seriously, the opening weekend should be declared a national holiday. Lucky for us it coincides with Labor Day weekend, so we get three days of games.
I’m going to break down the matchups of the best conference, the ACC. I’ll focus on the weaker Coastal division.
North Carolina vs. California: The Tar Heels are replacing the No. 2 pick in the NFL draft quarterback Mitch Trubisky. LSU transfer Brandon Harris is his replacement. Frankly, Harris was not a good player in Baton Rouge so I can’t imagine him being great in Chapel Hill.
The Golden Bears were 5-7 in 2016 so they aren’t very good. Sophomore QB Ross Bowers will be making his first collegiate start so I give the advantage to UNC.
Miami vs. Bethune-Cookman: This is a game against an FCS opponent to start the season. The Hurricanes are replacing their all-time passing leader Brad Kaaya. Junior Malik Rosier is hoping to take his place and lead Miami to their first ACC Championship. He’ll have the chance to build a lot of confidence in this game. This will be an easy 40-point win.
Pittsburgh vs. Youngstown State: Youngstown State is also from the FCS but their pretty good, especially against Pitt. They beat the Panthers in 2012 31-17.
They met again in 2015 and lost 45-37. Pitt is coming off of two consecutive 8-5 seasons and their looking to improve. That will be difficult because they lost five players to the NFL Draft including QB Nathan Peterman and running back James Conner.
Sticking with the theme of breaking in a new quarterback Max Browne will make his debut. I expect a close game but Pitt should win.
Virginia vs. William & Mary: The Cavaliers are one of the few teams that return their starting QB, senior Kurt Benkhert. At first glance it seems like he was pretty decent last year, throwing for over 2,500 yards and 21 touchdowns. He set the all-time record for single-game passing against Central Michigan, with 421 yards. Unfortunately, his 56% completion rate was the lowest for a UVA starter since Dan Ellis in 2000.
Coach Bronco Mendenhall is in his second season and looks to improve after a disastrous 2-10 campaign. The Wahoos lost to an FCS opponent (Richmond) to open the 2016 season so it won’t be unheard of for them to lose. I’m expecting them to win by single digits.
Duke vs. North Carolina Central: The Blue Devils got the memo to play an FCS team. They are coming off a 4-8 season and missed the postseason for the first time since 2011. They do return quarterback Daniel Jones and they’ll get a blowout win.
#21 Virginia Tech vs. #22 West Virginia: This game is played Sunday night at the home of the Washington Redskins, FedEx Field. This is actually a rivalry game where the winner gets the Black Diamond Trophy.
This is their first meeting in twelve years and I expect it to be intense. The Hokies will start redshirt freshman QB Josh Jackson. I expect him to struggle against the Mountaineers and Va Tech will lose.
Georgia Tech vs. #25 Tennessee: This is a prime time game on Labor Day at the new Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Both teams are breaking in new starting quarterbacks.
I think Tech’s biggest concern is replacing B-back and leading rusher Dedrick Mills. He was dismissed two weeks ago for violation of unidentified athletic department rules.
Even without Mills I believe the triple option will be too much for Tennessee and the Yellow Jackets will win.