Sage Hill loses battle at Midway
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Bryce Alderton
For two consecutive years, Sage Hill School and Midway Baptist have
begun the high school football season against one another, but Friday
the roles reversed from last fall.
This time, host Midway Baptist, with eight seniors, won its home
opener, 48-15, against the undersized, youthful Lightning in a
nonleague game, christening a new field -- the outfield grass of the
school’s baseball field. A year ago, host Sage Hill won its first
varsity game against Midway Baptist, 42-24, and finished 3-7.
“[Midway Baptist] got older and we got younger,” said Sage Hill
Coach Tom Monarch, who was more than pleased with his team’s
performance, especially that of the freshmen and sophomores. “We had
five freshmen starting and I don’t know too many teams in [Orange
County] that have that. They made some big hits and plays. The
mistakes they made were critical, but they will correct them as the
season progresses. They will be able to build on this.”
Midway Baptist’s biggest keys on offense Friday -- all seniors --
were tailbacks Anthony Medina and Isaiah Warner, along with
quarterback Ryan Webb and receiver John Carr.
Warner ran roughshod over the Sage Hill defense, scoring five
touchdowns -- four rushing -- while amassing 126 yards on 13 carries
and catching four balls for 46 yards. Webb completed 12 of 16 passes
for 128 yards and no interceptions, using Warner and Medina out of
the backfield on screen plays that confused the Lightning from the
outset.
“We need the linebackers to move outside and contain, we weren’t
getting there quick enough,” Monarch said. “We might have to use five
linebackers and make teams throw.”
Sage Hill didn’t deviate from its running game despite falling
behind, 28-6, after Medina -- a linebacker -- stepped into the
passing lane to pick off a pass and return it 31 yards with one minute, 43 seconds remaining in the first half.
Sage Hill senior Eddie Huang, one of only five on the Lightning
roster, carried 20 times for 176 yards and two touchdowns, including
a 69-yarder, aided by a block from senior fullback Ray Lim, which
tied the score, 6-6, with just more than five minutes to go in the
first quarter.
That was as close as Sage Hill got until Huang’s 8-yard TD run
closed the gap to 28-15 with 5:20 left in the third quarter, capping
an 11-play, 98-yard march that consumed 5:32.
Sage Hill forced Midway to punt on its next offensive series, but
the Lightning’s returner couldn’t handle the kick and fumbled the
ball away to the hosts. Five plays later Webb hit Warner for an
18-yard TD screen play, taking much of the wind out of any comeback
attempt.
“That was a momentum breaker,” Monarch said. “We would have had
the ball on the 40 and had a good opportunity to make it a one
touchdown game, but we’re young and those things happen.”
Another an interception gave the Patriots the ball at the Sage
Hill 30 and Webb hit Medina, cutting across the middle, on the first
play from scrimmage to make it 41-15 with just less than 10 minutes
remaining in the game.
Despite four turnovers of their own, the Lightning forced five
fumbles, recovering three loose balls. Sophomores Morgan Brief and
Nick Sohl both recovered fumbles, but it was senior linebacker Peter
Haderlein and freshman Don Ayers who came up with what was a key
turnover at the time.
With Midway Baptist marching on the first drive of the second
half, Webb connected with Medina on a slant and the receiver sprinted
for the corner of the end zone. Haderlein raced back and stripped the
ball loose from Medina’s grasp and Ayres was right behind to pounce
on the ball at the 2, setting up the aforementioned 98-yard drive.
“[Ayres] is a phenomenal football player,” Monarch said.
“[Freshman] Michael Solomon came up with some big hits as well.”
Freshman Braden Ross started at quarterback for the Lightning
Friday and showed poise in the pocket, completing 5 of 7 passes for
24 yards, despite being pressured several times from a blitzing front
four. Ross also handled the punting duties.
“We want to develop him into a drop-back passer,” Monarch said.
“He has a solid arm, so he just needs time to mature. I was pleased
with his composure, he made good decisions and has the potential to
be one of the best in the county.”
Huang, who was slated to start at quarterback before he suffered a
shoulder injury in the preseason, played wide receiver for the
Lightning last year, but responded well to his new role Friday.
“We’ll improve, I like the whole team,” he said.
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