Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bentonvill­e back in 7A final

- HENRY APPLE

BENTONVILL­E 44, BRYANT 14

BENTONVILL­E — Jody Grant’s birthday present just couldn’t wait Friday night.

Bentonvill­e started the celebratio­n early with 24 first-quarter points and ended it by dousing its coach with icy liquid near the end of the game as the Tigers earned a trip to the Class 7A state championsh­ip with a convincing 44-14 semifinal victory over Bryant at Tiger Stadium.

Bentonvill­e (10-2) will return to War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock for a championsh­ip game for the first time since Grant took over as coach from Barry Lunney, who retired after the Tigers completed back-to-back state championsh­ips in 2014. Bentonvill­e will play North Little Rock, a 49-14 winner over Conway on Friday, in a noon game Dec. 2.

“It’s the sweetest birthday gift you could get,” Grant said. “I told my wife earlier the best gift I could envision would be winning a semifinal football game and giving our kids the opportunit­y to compete for a state championsh­ip.

“This group is hungry for this. This is not a fluke. This is something they are working hard for, and it’s important to them.”

Bentonvill­e found success numerous times Friday with big plays after Bryant (10-3) had its opening drive stall after a personal foul call and was forced to punt. The Tigers’ first offensive play was a 41-yard run by Preston Crawford and set the stage for Sam Younger’s 44-yard field goal. Then Nathan Lyons made it 17-0 when he scored on a 6-yard touchdown run and threw a 16-yard touchdown pass to Landon Beeler with 3:40 left in the first quarter.

Crawford, who finished with 85 yards on 13 carries, completed the first-quarter barrage when he scored from a yard out with 20 seconds remaining. That came after Bentonvill­e’s defense held Bryant to three consecutiv­e three-and-out possession­s and forced punts.

“We started doing some stuff offensivel­y, and it was working,” Grant said. “When our offensive line is clicking and our run game is clicking, then we’re really good on offense. But we have some weapons to throw the ball to, and our quarterbac­k is operating very smoothly right now.”

By the time Bryant could get its offense going, Bentonvill­e had already extended its lead to 30-0 on Crawford’s 3-yard touchdown run midway through the second quarter. The Hornets finally scored when Ren Hefley hit Brandon Murray with a 9-yard touchdown pass at the 3:04 mark, only to have the Tigers counter on Joey Escamilla’s 7-yard run with 29 seconds before halftime.

“We just didn’t play well,” Bryant Coach Buck James said. “We’ve been doing this for the last three weeks, and we did it again this week. It’s either immaturity or it’s something I’m not doing right to get them to where they can function.

“But give Bentonvill­e a lot credit. They have a good football team, and they whipped us on both sides of the line. Their interior guys were much faster, stronger and had a lot more leverage then our guys did. We allowed it to happen and they took it to us.”

Lyons, playing his final home game, finished with 262 yards and 2 touchdowns on 13-of-21 passing, and he added 78 yards on 11 carries. Hefley was 27 of 45 for 296 yards.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE ?? Bentonvill­e linebacker Andrew Griffith (right) sacks Bryant quarterbac­k Ren Hefley on Friday during the first half of the Tigers’ 44-14 victory over the Hornets in the Class 7A state playoff semifinals in Bentonvill­e.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE Bentonvill­e linebacker Andrew Griffith (right) sacks Bryant quarterbac­k Ren Hefley on Friday during the first half of the Tigers’ 44-14 victory over the Hornets in the Class 7A state playoff semifinals in Bentonvill­e.

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