Chattanooga Times Free Press

QUITE THE RUN

MIDSEASON SWITCH ON O-LINE LED TO RIDGELAND’S RUSHING RENAISSANC­E

- BY LINDSEY YOUNG STAFF WRITER

Halfway through their 2019 football schedule, the Ridgeland Panthers were in crisis mode.

Sitting at 1-4 and coming off a 27-16 home loss to GHSA Region 6-AAAA rival Northwest Whitfield in early October — a game in which the offense was manhandled by the Bruins — first-year head coach Kip Klein and his staff decided to make some changes.

The running game, which has been dominant while helping the program put together what is now a run of seven region championsh­ips in 12 seasons, was struggling. This happened despite the presence of Jordan Blackwell, who rushed for 1,000 yards last season, speedy options in Terrance and Torrance Roberts and a large but young offensive line.

Klein, a former offensive lineman, decided to implement a zone blocking scheme. In their next five games, all wins, the Panthers produced 55, 42, 41, 31 and 55 points, propelling them to the region title and home-field advantage for the start of the state playoffs tonight. The Panthers will host Madison County (4-6), the No. 4 seed from Region 8.

“Changing the blocking scheme allowed us to use our linemen’s athleticis­m more,” Klein said. “Since we made the change, they are really helping us move the ball. Our (firststrin­g) quarterbac­k (Nathan Carver) has been out most of the season with injury, so we’re starting a freshman, which has limited what we can do offensivel­y.

“With the run game going strong now, the confidence is back.”

Blackwell and Terrance Roberts combined for more than 2,000 rushing yards during the

regular season and figure to carry the ball 20 or so times apiece each game behind a line that includes sophomore tackles Jacob Klein (6-foot-6, 275 pounds) and Logan Montgomery (6-6, 250) as well as senior Logan Godfrey (6-2, 265).

Tonight’s game will be a battle of runheavy offenses as the Red Raiders also rely on their ground game in a triple-option attack. Defending against it will be difficult, Klein said, because the Panthers haven’t seen it much this season.

“Everyone used to run it, or some version of it, so you practiced against it each week,” Klein said. “It’s amazing now. We have to teach the kids how to attack it now, like telling our defensive linemen you have to take the fullback, not the quarterbac­k. We’ve got three guys on the dive, two on each side for the quarterbac­k and two for the pitch.

“You try to do too much and they will kill you. It’s a good matchup for us in that they don’t pass, but it’s a bad matchup if we can’t stop them and (we) let them go on long drives.”

In other first-round matchups involving area teams, Georgia’s leading rusher, Jahmyr Gibbs (2,358 yards, 39 touchdowns), leads Dalton (7-3) against the state’s topranked Class AAAAAA team, Dacula (10-0), which has allowed less than 100 rushing yards per game.

In Class AAAA, Region 6 runner-up Heritage (8-2) has a similar challenge to Ridgeland in trying to stop the potent ground game of St. Pius X (5-5) at Sims Field, while Northwest (7-3) travels to Region 8 champion Oconee County (9-1).

In Class AAA, Region 6 champion North Murray and electric quarterbac­k Ladd McConkey welcome a tough No. 4 seed to Chatsworth in Monroe Area (7-3). The Purple Hurricanes have their own dynamic quarterbac­k in Selatian Slaughter Jr., who has 23 touchdowns and is just shy of 2,200 total yards this season.

Calhoun (9-1), which hosts Morgan County (7-3), is playing its best football of the season. The Region 6 runner-up has won six straight games, outscoring its opponents a whopping 240-44 during the run. Sonoravill­e (5-5), the region’s No. 4 seed, plays at Region 8 champ Jefferson (8-1).

In Class AA, Region 7’s Chattooga (5-5) travels to Region 5 champion Callaway (9-1), which has averaged more than 40 points per game. In Class A public, No. 23 seed Trion (5-5) goes on the road to face No. 10 Commerce (8-2).

Christian Heritage, as the No. 8 overall seed in the Class A private playoffs, earned a first-round bye. Next week the Lions will host the winner of First Presbyteri­an Day and Wesleyan.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Ridgeland’s Jordan Blackwell carries the ball during the Panthers’ home game against Northwest Whitfield on Oct. 4. The Panthers lost, but it set up a major turning point in their season.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Ridgeland’s Jordan Blackwell carries the ball during the Panthers’ home game against Northwest Whitfield on Oct. 4. The Panthers lost, but it set up a major turning point in their season.

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