Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

White Hall grinds out clock, wins

- By Adam Cole

For Bobby Bolding, there’s nothing more discouragi­ng than his defense giving up a long drive.

“It’s demoralizi­ng when someone can grind it on you,” the

White Hall coach said.

“You get to where you kind of want to panic defensivel­y when somebody’s 4-yarding you to death. You want to start doing things you don’t normally do.”

On Friday, White Hall’s (11-2) offense did just that in its 24-14 win against Little Rock Christian, grinding out long drives against the Warriors.

The Bulldogs held onto the ball for 29:39 — more than half the game. They averaged 3:18 minutes per drive, but three drives of 4-plus minutes, including an 8:57 possession to start the second half, helped White Hall maintain control.

“I think it’s very important to our success, keeping our defense off the field, and just being able to stay on schedule offensivel­y, getting 3 yards at a time, and just grinding it out,” Bolding said. “We’ve got kids that are playing ball ways, so it shortens the game up as well.”

It’s not uncommon for White Hall to win the time of possession battle, either. In nine of its 13 games this season, it has held onto the ball longer than its opponent. It’s posted a 7-2 record in those games, and is 4-0 in games when it’s held onto the ball for less time than its opponent, though that hasn’t happened since Oct. 15, when it beat Watson Chapel 42-14. Since that game, the Bulldogs have won the possession battle for five consecutiv­e weeks. In those games, they’ve averaged about 30 minutes of possession time a game, up 4:25 from their season average.

Bolding said the uptick in possession time is more coincidenc­e than anything.

“We haven’t been able to pop the big play,” Bolding said. “So, it’s just been a grind.”

While it’s been a grind, the Bulldogs have had multiple players step up in that role. On Friday, it was quarterbac­k Matthew Martinez and running backs Durran Cain and Zaire Green. Including those three, White Hall has five players with 200-plus rushing yards this year. But to Bolding, it’s a system that takes more than just capable runners.

“It goes to your offensive line and fullbacks and tight ends,” Bolding said. “You’re doing multiple block schemes and they’re to grind it out, and it’s harder to coach than just passing it every play. That’s not a knock against passing, because you can run a million different routes. Our philosophy is a little different. I’m an old offensive lineman, so we’re going to coach at the line of scrimmage.”

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