It took a full quarter for both teams to shake off what
might be described as the adrenaline of the rivalry atmosphere before the first
points were posted last Friday night. After being denied on a fourth and goal
play late in the first quarter, Park Hill South would come back on the next
drive with a short field to score on a four-yard touchdown run from Myles
Hammonds to give them a 7-0 second quarter lead. Park Hill would struggle to
gain offensive momentum most of the night, particularly in the first half, but
their defense would hold Park Hill South to a modest 10-0 half lead after the
Panthers added a 34-yard field goal late in the second quarter.
“We thought that if we could run at them early and be
physical with them, it could pay off,” Park Hill South coach Mark Simcox said.
“Defensively, we wanted to take away what they wanted to do by stopping the run.”
Park Hill South did just that by building a first half lead,
putting the pressure on Park Hill to create momentum coming out of the locker
room for the second half. It would be Park Hill South turning up the heat
though, as they scored touchdowns on all four possessions of the third quarter
to build an insurmountable 38-7 lead going into the fourth quarter. Through the
air and on the ground, the Panthers displayed one of their most balanced
offensive performances of the year. True to form, Park Hill South would use the
legs of Hammonds
to run the ball to set up the four scores that Panthers receivers Logan
Gillespie, Craig Scott (2), and Robert
Lane would pull in for touchdown receptions. Hammonds would end the
night with 184 yards on 27 carries.
“If we can keep them from cheating on our run game, we can
run it. If they cheat, then we’ll throw it to the outside,” Simcox said. “The
game’s always a little bit easier on offense when you can do a little bit of
both.”
Park Hill’s lone score until late in the fourth quarter came
from a 95-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by Kenyotte Harris in the third
quarter.
But Park Hill’s defense just couldn’t stop the resilient
Park Hill South offense as the Panthers would cap off the third quarter scoring
their fourth straight touchdown in as many drives. Ronnie Bertlesmeyer would
put the icing on the cake with a short touchdown run in the fourth quarter to
extend Park Hill South’s lead to 45-7.
Quarterback Clay Ford would add a short touchdown run in the
game’s final minutes to narrow the margin to 45-14. The night would be the Park
Hill South’s though as the Panther faithful stormed the field to celebrate
clinching their second King of the Hill title in as many years. Simcox told his
team following the game that he hoped it was an opportunity for the program to
look forward to bigger things.
“Because we’ve lost so many games to them over the years, it’s
hard for our kids to get over it,” Simcox said. “As a program, we have to look
to bigger things. This will always to be big, just as long as it doesn’t affect
your next game.”
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