Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chattooga, Dade, Gordon Central hope to contend for Georgia state playoffs

- BY MARTY KIRKLAND STAFF WRITER

Chattooga football coach Charles Hammon didn’t claim to be speaking for Georgia’s Region 7-AA when he assessed the league’s outlook for this season, but his view isn’t an uncommon one.

“It’s still Rockmart and Pepperell, and then I think it’s anybody’s game for that third and fourth spot, I really do,” Hammon said. “… I think anybody can beat anybody any Friday night, but I think the two favorites are Rockmart and Pepperell.”

With the Georgia High School Associatio­n’s reclassifi­cation cycle now four years instead of two, those two programs enter the third season of 7-AA’s current configurat­ion with one region title apiece, with Pepperell winning in 2016 and Rockmart winning last year. Their rivalry — Rockmart holds a lead of 19-18-1 in the all-time series, according to the Georgia High School Football Historians Associatio­n — would only grow if their Oct. 5 meeting settles the region championsh­ip again.

Other region teams are trying to do their own growing, of course, and those include Gordon Central, which went 2-8 last season — both wins came in region play — in Cory Nix’s first year as coach. That may not sound like much, and Nix and the Warriors know it’s far from where they want to be, but it matched the number of wins for the previous four years combined.

Now Nix hopes a lineup that returns 17 starters, including an offensive line that has four members returning and the other a senior who has come back to football, can make an even bigger impact. He sees an opening, too, though even he acknowledg­ed that Rockmart, led by senior running back Zabrion Whatley, will set a tough pace.

“Certain teams lost a lot of really good kids,” Nix said. “Pepperell lost 90 percent of their production, so you would think they would be down some. Rockmart is the top dog and should be the region champs. After that, it’s pretty wide open. Coosa has some players, as does Chattooga, but we feel we can be right there.”

Dade County has endured back-to-back losing seasons since reaching the playoffs three years ago and brings back only four offensive starters, but the Wolverines expect their sizable, strong, physical line to lead them to what they hope is higher ground. Running back Malaki Webb, a 1,200-yard rusher in 2017, is being counted on for another big year as a junior.

“I think a strong season with this bunch right now is winning the games you’re supposed to win and giving yourself a chance to compete in the playoffs,” said Bradley Warren, who’s entering his 11th season as Dade County’s coach. “… We’ve got to find a way to win four or five region games.”

One of those ways is by staying upright where the injury list is concerned. That’s a challenge that rises exponentia­lly each step down the classifica­tion ladder, and Dade County might feel the pain more than most as one of Class AA’s smaller schools, enrollment-wise, in a region with some of the classifica­tion’s biggest schools.

“We’ve just got to find different ways to give ourselves a chance to win,” Warren said. “I feel like the region will be pretty balanced this year for the most part, so whoever stays healthy will have a chance to make the playoffs.”

Chattooga has found a way to make the playoffs in each of Hammon’s first four seasons as coach, and he’s optimistic a fifth straight state berth is a reasonable goal with the experience level considerab­ly better for the Indians this year compared to 2017, when they went 4-7. He expects big things from several position groups but especially in the secondary, where height and experience could make the Indians a tough matchup.

One of his concerns is arriving at the start of region play in mid-September with health and confidence intact. The Indians’ nonregion schedule is against Adairsvill­e, Wesleyan and Heritage, all playoff teams with winning records a year ago.

Regardless of how that goes, though, the objective from that point forward will remain the same.

“We expect to get back to the playoffs — that’s our goal,” Hammon said. “We try to walk before we run, but our goal here is to get back in the playoffs and play well in the region.”

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD ?? Dade County running back Malaki Webb, center, is being counted on for good production again this season after rushing for 1,200 yards as a sophomore in 2017.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD Dade County running back Malaki Webb, center, is being counted on for good production again this season after rushing for 1,200 yards as a sophomore in 2017.

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