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Flowing Wells falls; Sabino, Foothills win big; 16 other final scores, stats

  • Oct 9, 2015
  • Oct 9, 2015 Updated Nov 12, 2015

News, final scores and stat leaders from Friday's high school football games.

Oct. 9: Pusch Ridge Christian 24, Flowing Wells 21

Oct. 9: Pusch Ridge Christian 24, Flowing Wells 21

Pusch Ridge Christian senior quarterback Cody Cropp took the snap, moved a couple steps to his right and essentially walked into the end zone to cap off a tenacious 14-play drive — a drive that may go down as the biggest in program history.

The Lions survived a wild third quarter and stole the show at Flowing Wells’ homecoming on Friday night, knocking of the unbeaten Caballeros 24-21 and making a statement that eighth-ranked Pusch Ridge is a legitimate contender in its new division (see box score below).

“This win was huge for us,” said sophomore Tamerat McLeod, who rushed for a game-high 135 yards. “We’ve been talking about it for months. We moved up to Division IV just to play this kind of team so it’s awesome. This is a huge step for us.”

Yes it was.

Pusch Ridge (6-1) has won six straight games since losing its season opener at Benson, the No. 1 team in Division V. The Lions qualified for the state playoffs in each of the last two seasons and have won 30 games since Troy Cropp took over the program before the 2012 season.

But no victory was sweeter than Friday night’s come-from-behind road win.

“I think it’s probably the biggest win in Pusch Ridge history, especially on this stage,” said Troy Cropp. “We’ve won playoff games before, but we feel like this was a playoff game.”

Cropp’s 1-yard touchdown run with 1 minute 36 seconds left came one play after senior James Raica rushed for a 7-yard gain, giving him 96 yards.

The score finished off a drive that started on the Pusch Ridge 21, after Flowing Wells turned the ball over on downs with 7:59 remaining.

Ironically, it was a drive similar to the one the Lions opened the game with, running more than seven minutes off the clock before Dionte Flores and the Caballeros touched the ball. But that drive lasted 12 plays and resulted in a turnover on downs.

“That wasn’t necessarily our plan for this game, that is our plan for this season,” said Cody Cropp. “That’s what our style of game is, and we’re a team. There’s no one standout; everyone gets the ball, and everyone blocks for each other.”

Flowing Wells (7-1) managed to move the ball near midfield before the Lions came up with a fourth-down stop in the final seconds of the game, just a few plays after Ben Walker sacked quarterback Julio Sandoval to help thwart the possibility of the Caballeros getting back in the game.

“They got up on us, but we had great heart,” said Walker, who caught three passes for 116 yards. “That’s what it came down to. They got their touchdowns; they had momentum swings, but we just never gave up.”

Flowing Wells entered the night ranked seventh in Division IV and had a 7-3 lead at halftime. But things went south in a back-and-forth third quarter when Flores — arguably Tucson’s top player — ended up sidelined for some time with a left leg injury.

The senior two-way starter eventually came back in but was held a season-low 47 yards on 11 carries and, most importantly, no touchdowns.

“He’s a tough kid,” Flowing Wells coach Mark Brunenkant said. “I think if we have a different Dionte, maybe not a different outcome, but we score more points.”

Just a few plays after Flores hobbled off the field early in the third quarter, Sandoval connected with Bailey Caron for a 44-yard touchdown in his first game back since the second week of the season. The senior was out with an injured left hand and was wearing a splint on Friday night.

Walker responded by hauling in a jaw-dropping 71-yard touchdown pass just a few minutes later to make the score 14-10, with Flowing Wells still leading.

“I don’t know how I caught it, and then I don’t know how I stayed inbounds,” Walker said. “He spun me around. I just kept concentration on the ball. I knew I had to catch it, and once I got it, I took off.”

The Caballeros drove down for another touchdown after that, but McLeod answered right back with a 58-yard scoring run to make it 21-17 with 4:40 left in the third quarter.

Flowing Wells, which hosts Sahuarita next week, got the ball early in the fourth quarter on its 45. But the drive stalled at the 21 when Sandoval nearly had a pass intercepted on fourth down, setting the stage for the Lions’ big drive.

“We’ve just got to bounce back,” Brunenkant said. “We’ve just got to get healthy; we’re banged up. We’ve got to come back from a little adversity.”

Daniel Gaona  

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Catalina Foothills 56, Nogales 28

Catalina Foothills 56, Nogales 28

After a 14-14 first half, Catalina Foothills scored 42 second-half and 28 fourth-quarter points to beat section rival Nogales 56-28.

Going into the game, Foothills (6-2) was No. 12 in the AIA rankings and in second place in Division III, Section VI. Nogales was 16th and fourth in the section.

“We lose this game, and we don’t make the playoffs, so our backs were against the wall, but we came through and got a good victory,” said Foothills junior quarterback Rhett Rodriguez.

Rodriguez ran for 47 yards and two touchdowns on 11 carries and passed for 262 yards and three touchdowns, going 15 for 22 through the air.

“At the end of the first half, we just started to get our momentum back, and everyone was making big plays for us, and our offensive and defensive lines really stepped up tonight and helped us to the win,” said Foothills junior receiver/safety Jimmy Stewart III, who had two interceptions.

Following an 82-yard pass to senior receiver Alan Ortega, Nogales tied the game at 7 in the second quarter when senior middle linebacker/fullback Coy Colgate ran the ball a yard for a touchdown.

On the ensuing kick off, which was moved up because of a Foothills penalty, Nogales recovered an onside kick, and the Falcons were whistled for two unsportsmanlike penalties. The Apaches’ drive started at the Foothills’ 8-yard line, and Colgate ran it into the end zone from 3 yards out.

Foothills head coach Jeff Scurran said the kickoff went only 8 yards, and the Apaches were allowed to advance it.

Scurran said Catalina Foothills put in junior receiver/defensive back Dashiel Pudwill on to the kickoff return team, and he ran back a kickoff 55 yards for a touchdown to start the fourth quarter.

Before Pudill’s touchdown, Nogales had cut Catalina Foothills’ lead to 28-21, but the score started a 28-7 run for the Falcons to finish the game.

“That onside recovery for a touchdown, that was arguably the biggest play of the game,” Rodriguez said. “That gave us all the momentum back.”

Foothills held Nogales senior running back/cornerback Freddy McCarty, who was second in Southern Arizona in rushing with 1,075 yards going in to the game, to 6 yards on seven carries.

“McCarty is an amazing running back, and we had to stop him before he got started,” Scurran said. “That’s as good a defensive front seven performance that I’ve had since I’ve been here at Foothills. We were just all over him.”

James Kelley 

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Tucson High 42, Sahuaro 13

Tucson High 42, Sahuaro 13

Deandre Williams of Tucson scored on a 69-yard run on the first play of the game Friday night, and the Tucson Badgers beat the Sahuaro Cougars 42-13.

Williams had a total of 229 rushing yards, giving him a total of 1,240 for the season. Play after play, Williams' name was called.

“It means a lot to me because we haven’t beaten these guys since I’ve been here. It’s just saying that Tucson is here to stay,” Williams said.

During the second quarter, Williams scored on a 6-yard run, and moments later was also able to score on a 2-point conversion.

Tucson's Daquavin Bennett was the next player to score a touchdown on a 37-yard pass from quarterback Jorge Flores. Flores had 146 passing yards. Flores had 52 rushing yards and two touchdown passes, increasing his season total to 11. Williams literally ran over people to score a 2-point conversion putting the Badgers in the lead 28-0.

The Badgers continued to score after halftime. Jeff Lockwood scored on a 5-yard run, and Giovanni Ahmuda kicked the extra point.

During the fourth quarter, Tucson's Izrael Corrales scored on a 12-yard pass from Flores.

Sahuaro (3-4) was able to score its first touchdown on a 5-yard pass to Lincoln Stewart from quarterback Stephen Miller. During the last minutes in the fourth quarter, Sahuaro scored again on a 6-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Wood from Miller.

“The kids did a pretty tremendous job from top to bottom,” said head coach Justin Argraves. “It’s more rewarding to see them with their smiles.”

Tucson (6-1) will play against Cienega for the last home game during the regular season Friday, Oct. 16.

Alexa Portillo 

Marana 49, Desert View 23

Marana 49, Desert View 23

Marana routed host Desert View 49-23 behind a poised performance by its backup freshman quarterback on Friday night.

Marana freshman Trenton Bourguet threw for three touchdowns in his first varsity start, while committing no turnovers in an all-around solid performance.

“He’s a very experienced freshman,” said Marana coach Andy Litten. “He’s a kid that has so much poise and he works really hard.”

Regular starter Connor Leavens was out for the Tigers after breaking his hand last week against Nogales.

“I was fine,” said Bourguet, who finished the game 10 of 15 for 144 yards and three touchdowns. “If it wasn’t for my teammates I would have been a lot more nervous, but they helped me out and coach had a great scheme for me.”

Marana’s Sammy Preder opened the scoring on a deceptive misdirection handoff that went for 43 yards and a touchdown. After an impressive one handed grab for a 2-point conversion, the Tigers found themselves up 8-0.

Desert View struggled to get anything going in the first quarter. Quarterback Ian Strickland was put under a lot pressure early on by a fired-up Marana defense that were able to get to the senior quarterback on numerous occasions and forced him into a bad throw on a second-and-1 play that resulted in an interception.

Things got worse for the Strickland and the Jaguars offense in the second quarter. On the first play of the quarter there was a fumbled snap that was recovered by Marana at Desert View 22-yard-line.

Bourguet was able to capitalize on the Jaguars turnover a couple of plays later when he connected on a 23-yard pass to Dominic Gehr, who pulled the ball away from a defender mid-stride for the score to put the Tigers up 16-0.

Desert View with Alex Courtemanche's 36-yard touchdown pass from Ian Strickland on a well designed play action pass on fourth-and-6 to make it 16-8.

Marana capitalized on a botched fake punt attempt by the Jaguars with under a minute left to play in the half. On fourth-and-7 at its own 25-yard line Deseet View tried to get creative on a fake that resulted in an incomplete pass and turnover on downs.

Marana scored on the ensuing drive, when Bourguet found Caleb Reeves for a 7-yard touchdown pass with 27 seconds left in the half to make it 23-8.

The third quarter was highlighted by a running exhibition put on by Marana’s Sammy Preder. The senior scored two touchdowns in the quarter highlighted by a 38-yard burst where the crafty back eluded multiple Jaguar defenders on the line and used a huge burst to outrun the Desert View secondary. 

“Without my lineman up front I’m nothing,” said Preder, who finished the game with 173 yards and three touchdowns. “They are the ones who open up holes for me so those are their touchdowns and yards too.”

Marana led 35-15 at the end of the third quarter and used a late interception return for a touchdown to put the game out of reach.

Marana (4-3) plays Rincon/University next week.

“We see ourselves in playoff mode right now,” Litten said. “We just got to keep winning and keep the steam rolling.”

Nick Peppe 

Sunnyside 32, Cienega 29

Sunnyside 32, Cienega 29

At Cienega, Sunnyside and the Bobcats played a pretty normal first three quarters, but combined for a furious fourth quarter that saw four-lead changes and a big-time player in Sunnyside QB Nick O'Hagin make a big-time play.

With his team trailing by five with under four minutes to play, O'Hagin completed a 26-yard pass to wide receiver Gabriel Soto, then on the next play, he pulled the ball down and ran through a hole and hugged the right sidelines for a 39-yard game winning touchdown.

"I dropped back and it parted like the Red Sea," O'Hagin said after the game. "My line did a great job and Daniel (Hernandez) made a great block on three people near the goal line to get me in the end zone."

Down by 7 at halftime, Cienega started the fourth quarter scoring on a fourth-down pass to tie the game at 16. On the ensuing possession, a bad snap by Sunnyside was recovered in the end zone by linebacker Brandon Cross, and Cienega would lead for the first time. After a Sunnyside score, Cienega would take the lead again before O'Hagin's heroics in the final minutes.

Cienega will travel to Tucson High next week and Sunnyside will host Sierra Vista Buena.

Highlight reel

During the back-and-forth fourth quarter, Cienega quarterback Walker Frighetti found Wyatt Dansbee for what appeared to be a go-ahead touchdown only for him to fumble at the 2-yard line. Fortunately for Cienega, teammate Kaleb Bost was right there to scoop up the ball and score a go-ahead touchdown and make it 29-24 late.

Player of the game

O'Hagin ran for 137 yards and two touchdowns, while throwing for 232 yards. He led his team to two go-ahead touchdowns, including the game-winning run in the fourth quarter.

By the numbers

36. After just 25 points were scored in the first three quarters, both teams put on an offensive display combining for 36 total points in the fourth quarter.

He said it

"These aren't all style points and we'll take a win anyway we can get one." said Sunnyside coach Glenn Posey.

Sam Martin

Sahuarita 42, Rio Rico 0

Sahuarita 42, Rio Rico 0

At Sahuarita, the Mustangs (3-4) used a balanced attack on offense along with a smothering effort on defense to control the momentum and beat visiting Rio Rico (3-4).

Sahuarita jumped out to an early 21-0 lead after the first quarter thanks to two short touchdown runs by RB Dylan Dutton, and never looked back.

Senior QB Damion Hill led the way for Sahuarita with two touchdowns through the air and one on the ground. The Mustangs had 187 yards through the air to go with 173 on the ground, while allowing only 165 yards of total offense to the Hawks.

Next week Sahuarita travels to Flowing Wells in a matchup sure to have huge playoff implications for both teams, while Rio Rico looks to rebound against Amphi.

Highlight reel

In the third quarter, Sahuarita senior LB Gustavo Miraval made a spectacular adjustment to make an interception, and took it 64 yards down the sideline, coming up just short of the end zone.

Player of the game

Hill. The senior threw for 182 yards and two touchdowns, while rushing for another one.

By the numbers

4. In what was a pretty clean contest all night, both teams combined for only four penalties, two coming from each side.

He said it

"We've played a tough schedule the whole season, but we have remained really disciplined and I think the hard work is finally starting to show." — Sahuarita QB Hill.

Mark Lawson

Sabino 44, Safford 0

Sabino 44, Safford 0

At Sabino, the Sabercats moved to 7-0 on the season with another dominating victory, this time over Safford (4-3).

Sabino's defense totally shutdown Safford's ground-based offense, holding the visiting Bulldogs to minus-3 yards rushing and minus-7 yards passing.

Next week, Sabino takes on a visiting Catalina Foothills team in a game that will have a serious Division III playoff implications.

Highlight reel

On fourth-and-25 late in the third quarter, Sabino quarterback Drew Dixon threw a perfect 42-yard touchdown pass between three Safford defenders to receiver Damen Gibson. The touchdown put the Sabercats up 44-0. This put the running clock rule in play.

Player of the game

Drew Dixon once again proved he's one of Southern Arizona's best. Despite sitting out the fourth quarter with the other offensive starters, he still rushed for two touchdowns and passed for another two.

By the numbers

40. The average margin of victory in Sabino's wins this season. The offense averages 46 points a game, while the defense allows just six points a game.

He said it

"All week we prepared and watched film on Safford. All we did tonight was come out and execute. We're a good team." — Dixon

W.P. Russell

Walden Grove 24, Amphitheater 6

Walden Grove 24, Amphitheater 6

At Amphi, Walden Grove (3-4) bounced back after losing three straight to hand Amphitheater its eighth straight loss with a 24-6 victory.

Louis Joseph led Walden Grove with 173 rushing yards, 55 receiving yards and one touchdown. He put Walden Grove on the board first when he took a screen pass 19 yards for a touchdown. The Red Wolves defense locked down and held Amphi scoreless over three quarters.

Amphi's (0-8) bright spot was Carlos Valarezo, who finished with 100 rushing yards, 31 receiving yards and one touchdown. Walden Grove heads into a tough three-game stretch starting with Cholla, and Amphi will travel to Rio Rico next week.

Highlight reel

Before the end of the half, Walden Grove's Carlos Guerrero threw a 26-yard jump-ball for Phillip Grajada, who pulled it in to give the Red Wolves a 17-6 lead.

Player of the game

Joseph. He finished with 228 total yards.

By the numbers

79. Aside from Carlos Valarezo's 100 rushing yards, Amphi's offense only produced 79 total offensive yards due to Walden Grove's swarming defense.

He said it

"Every day from now on I have to get better. I can't be at home just laying around, I have to something everyday to get better and motivate these guys do the same." — Joseph.

Chris Real

Pueblo 56, Palo Verde 7

Pueblo 56, Palo Verde 7

Pueblo earned a victory on the road as it cruised to an easy victory on the road.

Pueblo quarterback Justin Pledger threw for three touchdowns and ran for another as the Warriors won their fourth straight game.

It was a dominant performance for the Warriors (5-2) who controlled the game from the start with big plays and efficient scoring. Pueblo had three scores from 60 yards out or more, with running back Jorge Romero scoring on a 63-yard run and Pledger running in another from 80 yards while also passing for an 82-yard score.

The Pueblo defense was also tough Friday night, blocking a field goal attempt by Palo Verde and recording two interceptions as well. Andy Heidrick had Palo Verde's lone score, a 6-yard run for the Titans (1-7).

Highlight reel

On the first play of scrimmage in the third quarter, Pledger avoided a sack and heaved the ball deep to Frankie Gomez, who caught it and ran it in for an 82-yard score for the Warriors.

Player of the game

Pledger threw for 152 yards and three touchdowns. He also ran for 125 yards and another score from 80 yards out.

By the numbers

4. The number of touchdowns each for Pledger and Romero.

He said it

“That's the first time in a long time," said Pueblo coach Brandon Sanders on his team's four-game winning streak. Last year every time we came up on a four-game win streak, something happened and we lost. I don't know when the last time was when we had one, but that's a testament to those players and those coaches.”

Kyle Hansen

Catalina 22, Santa Rita 13

Catalina 22, Santa Rita 13

At Catalina, the Trojans earned their first win of the season on the back of some offensive big plays. Santa Rita battled from beginning to end and kept things interesting up in the end, but the Trojans made two more big plays than the Eagles could. Catalina's record improves to 1-6 while Santa Rita falls to 1-6.

Highlight reel

The highlight of the game came in the fourth quarter when Shadrack Kosseke Kope broke through the Eagles defense for a 79-yard run. This touchdown gave Catalina the lead they would never relinquish.

Player of the game

Andy Trinh, the starting quarterback for Catalina, did not put up huge numbers, but he was involved in two of the Trojans three touchdowns and led his team to a victory.

By the numbers

50. The Catalina offense had two plays longer than 50 yards and it was these explosive scoring plays that led to the victory.

He said it

"Its an amazing and wonderful feeling, this is something the guys have really wanted and they deserved it. This is a good point for us, we told them earlier we have 24 hours to celebrate and have fun but tomorrow we have to get ready for Palo Verde," — Catalina coach Zach Davila. 

Fernando Galvan

Mountain View 36, Surprise Shadow Ridge 10

Mountain View 36, Surprise Shadow Ridge 10

After a slow start against Queen Creek last week that saw Mountain View shut out in the first half, the Mountain Lions wanted to get things going quickly in their game against Shadow Ridge.

Tommy Lawrence delivered.

The senior took the opening kick back 95 yards to the house, and it looked as though Mountain View was rolling again.

The visitors from Surprise however, had different ideas. The Stallions defense held strong in the first quarter, and a fumble and a botched punt return gave Shadow Ridge (2-5) two opportunities in the Mountain Lions' red zone early in the game, but could do no better than a field goal.

Meanwhile, Mountain View (5-2) got their groove back. Quarterback Justice Summerset hit Isaiah Lovett twice in three minutes before the half to push the lead to 20-3.

In the second half, Lawrence stepped up for his team again, intercepting the ball in his own end zone and returning it 100 yards for a touchdown, smiling and pointing at Mountain View head coach Bam McRae along the way.

"You know, before the game he told me, I'm gonna have a pick-six tonight," McRae said. "That's what I want my kids to do, to set goals for themselves and aspire to make plays, you know you gotta dream about making plays before they ever happen, and for Tommy, I'm super excited for him.

Summerset connected with Reyes Gastellum for his third passing touchdown of the night in the fourth quarter, capping off the scoring for the Mountain Lions. Despite the highlight-reel plays, the Mountain Lions acknowledged they'll have to start games faster in order to finish the season the way they'd like, with Lawrence saying "Our starters, our playmakers, we need to make big plays. We can't be all flashy trying to juke and stuff, we've just gotta get the ball upfield."

Mountain View travels to Poston Butte (0-7) next week.

Highlight reel

Tommy Lawrence couldn't help but point and smile to his coaches as he passed midfield en route to the end zone on a 100 yard interception return in the 4th quarter. Shadow Ridge was deep in the Mountain Lions' territory and the pick seemed to be the straw that broke the Stallions' back.

Player of the game

Lawrence. The captain provided a boost to his team in the first and fourth quarters, with touchdowns on both a kickoff return and an interception, each of them going for at least 95 yards.

By the numbers

110. The amount of yards wide receiver Isaiah Lovett had at halftime to go with his two touchdowns right before the break. Lovett provided the spark the Mountain Lions needed in what was otherwise a slow start.

He said it

"I think defense is realizing they're an intricate of this team's success," McRae said. "Since I've been here we've tried to pride ourselves on being a hard-nosed defense, but sometimes when you run a spread offense, you don't get a lot of the banging in practice, so we've tried to condense our practices and get back to banging, and the game against Queen Creek helped put us back in that mentality."

Tim Towle

Cholla 38, Douglas 22

Cholla 38, Douglas 22

Cholla was able to pull off the home victory with solid defense. The defense put the home team in good field goal position multiple times and the offense was able to capitalize.

Highlight reel

Bobby Vega-Rodriguez ran through a defender with power to complete a 30-yard run.

Player of the game

Vega-Rodriguez had a great night. He had 72 passing yards and 178 yards on the ground.

By the numbers

0. The number of points Cholla held Douglas to in the third quarter.

He said it

“The sky is the limit." Cholla coach Virgil Henderson.

Leonard Moody

Canyon del Oro 34, San Tan Valley Poston Butte 28

Canyon del Oro 34, San Tan Valley Poston Butte 28

At Canyon del Oro, the Dorados offense erupted in the second quarter. The defense also played a key role in the win by forcing a fumble and grabbing an interception over Poston Butte (0-7).

Highlight reel

CDO's Garrett Woodlock scored his second touchdown of the game on a 19-yard run to put the Dorados up by 12 in the second quarter.

Player of the game

CDO's Noah Soto led the team in rushing yards with 120 and passing yards with 136 yards to go along with three touchdowns, two of which were on the ground.

By the numbers

410: The total number of offensive yards by CDO (2-5).

He said it

"This was a hard-fought win. We'll use our break to recoup and then focus on the next game." — Soto

Steven Fowler

Queen Creek 49, Ironwood Ridge 42

Queen Creek 49, Ironwood Ridge 42

Ironwood Ridge (5-2) was defeated on the road in Queen Creek after the Bulldogs broke a tie with a late touchdown.

Highlight reel

Ironwood Ridge free safety Harrison Beemiller stripped then football and ran 55 yards for a touchdown. The score propelled the Nighthawks to a first-quarter lead.

Player of the game

Queen Creek kicker/defensive back Zack Glaess. His early 49-yard field goal and fourth-quarter interception of Nighthawks QB Cole Gerkin created momentum swings that resulted in Bulldog scoring. 

By the numbers

66. The Nighthawks and Bulldogs each captured touchdowns from 66-yard passing plays. In the third quarter, Queen Creek receiver Zane Whiting hauled in a Kaleb Honea pass. Ironwood Ridge matched the play with a fourth-quarter catch and run from Gerkin to reserve quarterback Jared McKemy.

He said it

On the night's high scoring event, Ironwood Ridge coach Matt Johnson said, "Both teams made plays, they just made more (of them)."

Robert Benedetti

Salpointe Catholic 56, Sierra Vista Buena 0

Salpointe Catholic 56, Sierra Vista Buena 0

At Buena, the visiting Lancers scored a season-high 56 points and cruised to a win to snap a three-game losing streak. Salpointe (3-4) had scored just 34 total points over their last three games and had not surpassed 38 points in any game this year.

Salpointe plays at Sahuaro next Friday before hosting Tucson High and Cienega in the final two weeks of the season.

Buena (0-7) visits Sunnyside next week.

Benson 61, San Manuel 0

Benson 61, San Manuel 0

At San Manuel, the Bobcats continued their dominating shutout streak with the road win.

Benson (7-0) has outscored opponents 332-26 for the season, including 245-0 over the past four weeks.

Benson visits Bisbee next week. San Manuel (1-5) visits Willcox.

Thatcher 68, Empire 8

Thatcher 68, Empire 8

At Thatcher, visiting Empire was unable to win its third straight game as the host Eagles rushed for more than 450 yards.

The Ravens (3-4) host Douglas next week before traveling to play at Pueblo on Oct. 23 and closing the season at home against Palo Verde.

Bisbee 34, Tombstone 20

Bisbee 34, Tombstone 20

At Tombstone, the Pumas scored 28 unanswered in the second half to extend their winning streak to four.

The Yellow Jackets had a 14-6 lead at the break. Tombstone (2-4) will look to get back on track next week against visiting Tanque Verde (2-5).

Bisbee (5-1) will host Benson (7-0), the top team in Division V.

Tanque Verde 40, Willcox 12

Tanque Verde 40, Willcox 12

At Tanque Verde, the Hawks jumped out to a 27-6 lead by halftime and won to snap their five-game losing streak.

Eric Teitlebaum scored twice in the second quarter: Once on a 20-yard run and later on a 35-yard pass from Cisco Mcdonald, who accounted for four scores on the night, including three through the air. Two of those TD passes found Austin Torres. 

Tanque Verde (2-5) will look to make it two in a row next week when it travels to Tombstone (2-4).

Friday's leading passers

Friday's leading passers

A look at the top five passers last week.

Friday's leading rushers

Friday's leading rushers 

A look at the top five rushers last week.

Friday's leading receivers

Friday's leading receivers 

A look at the top five receivers last week.

Oct. 9: Catalina Foothills 56, Nogales 28

Oct. 9: Catalina Foothills 56, Nogales 28

After a 14-14 first half, Catalina Foothills scored 42 second-half and 28 fourth-quarter points to beat section rival Nogales 56-28.

Going into the game, Foothills (6-2) was No. 12 in the AIA rankings and in second place in Division III, Section VI. Nogales was 16th and fourth in the section.

“We lose this game, and we don’t make the playoffs, so our backs were against the wall, but we came through and got a good victory,” said Foothills junior quarterback Rhett Rodriguez.

Rodriguez ran for 47 yards and two touchdowns on 11 carries and passed for 262 yards and three touchdowns, going 15 for 22 through the air.

“At the end of the first half, we just started to get our momentum back, and everyone was making big plays for us, and our offensive and defensive lines really stepped up tonight and helped us to the win,” said Foothills junior receiver/safety Jimmy Stewart III, who had two interceptions.

Following an 82-yard pass to senior receiver Alan Ortega, Nogales tied the game at 7 in the second quarter when senior middle linebacker/fullback Coy Colgate ran the ball a yard for a touchdown.

On the ensuing kick off, which was moved up because of a Foothills penalty, Nogales recovered an onside kick, and the Falcons were whistled for two unsportsmanlike penalties. The Apaches’ drive started at the Foothills’ 8-yard line, and Colgate ran it into the end zone from 3 yards out.

Foothills head coach Jeff Scurran said the kickoff went only 8 yards, and the Apaches were allowed to advance it.

Scurran said Catalina Foothills put in junior receiver/defensive back Dashiel Pudwill on to the kickoff return team, and he ran back a kickoff 55 yards for a touchdown to start the fourth quarter.

Before Pudill’s touchdown, Nogales had cut Catalina Foothills’ lead to 28-21, but the score started a 28-7 run for the Falcons to finish the game.

“That onside recovery for a touchdown, that was arguably the biggest play of the game,” Rodriguez said. “That gave us all the momentum back.”

Foothills held Nogales senior running back/cornerback Freddy McCarty, who was second in Southern Arizona in rushing with 1,075 yards going in to the game, to 6 yards on seven carries.

“McCarty is an amazing running back, and we had to stop him before he got started,” Scurran said. “That’s as good a defensive front seven performance that I’ve had since I’ve been here at Foothills. We were just all over him.”

James Kelley 

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Oct. 9: Queen Creek 49, Ironwood Ridge 42

Oct. 9: Queen Creek 49, Ironwood Ridge 42

Ironwood Ridge (5-2) was defeated on the road in Queen Creek after the Bulldogs broke a tie with a late touchdown.

Highlight reel

Ironwood Ridge free safety Harrison Beemiller stripped then football and ran 55 yards for a touchdown. The score propelled the Nighthawks to a first-quarter lead.

Player of the game

Queen Creek kicker/defensive back Zack Glaess. His early 49-yard field goal and fourth-quarter interception of Nighthawks QB Cole Gerkin created momentum swings that resulted in Bulldog scoring. 

By the numbers

66. The Nighthawks and Bulldogs each captured touchdowns from 66-yard passing plays. In the third quarter, Queen Creek receiver Zane Whiting hauled in a Kaleb Honea pass. Ironwood Ridge matched the play with a fourth-quarter catch and run from Gerkin to reserve quarterback Jared McKemy.

He said it

On the night's high scoring event, Ironwood Ridge coach Matt Johnson said, "Both teams made plays, they just made more (of them)."

Robert Benedetti

Oct. 9: Pusch Ridge Christian 24, Flowing Wells 21

Oct. 9: Pusch Ridge Christian 24, Flowing Wells 21

Pusch Ridge Christian senior quarterback Cody Cropp took the snap, moved a couple steps to his right and essentially walked into the end zone to cap off a tenacious 14-play drive — a drive that may go down as the biggest in program history.

The Lions survived a wild third quarter and stole the show at Flowing Wells’ homecoming on Friday night, knocking of the unbeaten Caballeros 24-21 and making a statement that eighth-ranked Pusch Ridge is a legitimate contender in its new division (see box score below).

“This win was huge for us,” said sophomore Tamerat McLeod, who rushed for a game-high 135 yards. “We’ve been talking about it for months. We moved up to Division IV just to play this kind of team so it’s awesome. This is a huge step for us.”

Yes it was.

Pusch Ridge (6-1) has won six straight games since losing its season opener at Benson, the No. 1 team in Division V. The Lions qualified for the state playoffs in each of the last two seasons and have won 30 games since Troy Cropp took over the program before the 2012 season.

But no victory was sweeter than Friday night’s come-from-behind road win.

“I think it’s probably the biggest win in Pusch Ridge history, especially on this stage,” said Troy Cropp. “We’ve won playoff games before, but we feel like this was a playoff game.”

Cropp’s 1-yard touchdown run with 1 minute 36 seconds left came one play after senior James Raica rushed for a 7-yard gain, giving him 96 yards.

The score finished off a drive that started on the Pusch Ridge 21, after Flowing Wells turned the ball over on downs with 7:59 remaining.

Ironically, it was a drive similar to the one the Lions opened the game with, running more than seven minutes off the clock before Dionte Flores and the Caballeros touched the ball. But that drive lasted 12 plays and resulted in a turnover on downs.

“That wasn’t necessarily our plan for this game, that is our plan for this season,” said Cody Cropp. “That’s what our style of game is, and we’re a team. There’s no one standout; everyone gets the ball, and everyone blocks for each other.”

Flowing Wells (7-1) managed to move the ball near midfield before the Lions came up with a fourth-down stop in the final seconds of the game, just a few plays after Ben Walker sacked quarterback Julio Sandoval to help thwart the possibility of the Caballeros getting back in the game.

“They got up on us, but we had great heart,” said Walker, who caught three passes for 116 yards. “That’s what it came down to. They got their touchdowns; they had momentum swings, but we just never gave up.”

Flowing Wells entered the night ranked seventh in Division IV and had a 7-3 lead at halftime. But things went south in a back-and-forth third quarter when Flores — arguably Tucson’s top player — ended up sidelined for some time with a left leg injury.

The senior two-way starter eventually came back in but was held a season-low 47 yards on 11 carries and, most importantly, no touchdowns.

“He’s a tough kid,” Flowing Wells coach Mark Brunenkant said. “I think if we have a different Dionte, maybe not a different outcome, but we score more points.”

Just a few plays after Flores hobbled off the field early in the third quarter, Sandoval connected with Bailey Caron for a 44-yard touchdown in his first game back since the second week of the season. The senior was out with an injured left hand and was wearing a splint on Friday night.

Walker responded by hauling in a jaw-dropping 71-yard touchdown pass just a few minutes later to make the score 14-10, with Flowing Wells still leading.

“I don’t know how I caught it, and then I don’t know how I stayed inbounds,” Walker said. “He spun me around. I just kept concentration on the ball. I knew I had to catch it, and once I got it, I took off.”

The Caballeros drove down for another touchdown after that, but McLeod answered right back with a 58-yard scoring run to make it 21-17 with 4:40 left in the third quarter.

Flowing Wells, which hosts Sahuarita next week, got the ball early in the fourth quarter on its 45. But the drive stalled at the 21 when Sandoval nearly had a pass intercepted on fourth down, setting the stage for the Lions’ big drive.

“We’ve just got to bounce back,” Brunenkant said. “We’ve just got to get healthy; we’re banged up. We’ve got to come back from a little adversity.”

Daniel Gaona  

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