Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Lamey, Mastrocola help Carroll punt Friars

- By Dillon Friday

MARPLE >> There were plenty of accolades to go around following Archbishop Carroll’s 17-14 victory over Bonner & Prendergas­t in the Catholic League Class 4A play-in game at Cardinal O’Hara Sunday.

There was Juliano Mastrocola, who connected on a 20yard field goal in the first half, then up three with 1:23 to go, pinned the resurgent Friars at their own two with a 52yard punt that Patriots coach Kyle Detweiler called the play of the game.There was Malachi Hansen, the sophomore defensive back who forced a fumble in the fourth quarter. There was Joshua Bowman who delivered his longest rush, a 12-yard touchdown, to put Carroll up 17-0.

But special distinctio­n should go to quarterbac­k Nick Lamey. His numbers don’t jump off the page: He finished

9-19 for 86 yards and an intercepti­on and added 55 yards on the ground. And yet the confidence and poise Lamey displayed under center led the Patriots to their first postseason win since 2007.

“My teammates,” Lamey said when asked how he settled in so quickly. “Everybody has my back, supports me. And my line kept me comfortabl­e.”

Lamey, a sophomore, was making his first career start in place of the injured Russell Minor-Shaw.

“You’re optimistic, but you never really know,” senior defensive lineman Jaelen Parker said of his young teammates, like Lamey, delivering under pressure. “You see them in practice, you push them in practice. They’re doing all the right things, making the right decisions. You put your faith in them that they’ll do the right things in the game.”

Lamey did just that late in the third quarter. With Carroll up 10-0 — Mastrocola’s first-half field goal and a threeyard rush from Koran Butler accounted for the scoring — Lamey recognized a blitzing end on a read-option. He held the ball in the gut of his running back long enough to draw attention, then pulled it away and broke through the line for 48 yards to the 12. Bowman scored on the next play.

“My coaches, they told me I wasn’t riding out (the read option) long enough,” Lamey said. “I did it, and the end blitzed. I saw daylight.”

Bowman’s rush completed a 71-yard drive, which followed a 59-yard drive. The offense was humming, quite a response following an uneven first half.

“As soon as he started to make some plays then the confidence grew,” Detweiler said. “His ability to not get wavered was a testament to his mental strength.”

On the other side, Bonner struggled to get into the contest. The Friars turned the ball over on downs twice deep inside Carroll territory in the first half, once at the eightyard line, once at the 20. And after Nasim Cooper picked off Lamey and returned it to the Patriots’ 31 with 1:27 left in the first half, Michael Standen threw an intercepti­on on the next play.

The Friars, down 17-0, finally mounted a comeback in the fourth quarter. Shon Nelson took over at quarterbac­k midway through the third to give the offense a different look.

“They said go in and just try to make plays down field,” Nelson said.

He obliged. On fourth-and-3 from the 43, Nelson connected with Ian Edwards for a 31-yard game. Three plays later, Nelson scored on a keeper.

With four minutes to play, he showed off his legs and arm, escaping the pocket and heaving a deep ball for Ibrahima Diallo. Nelson then floated a fade to James Welde to bring Bonner to within, 17-14.

“We were trying to make as many plays as we possibly could,” Nelson, who finished with 172 yards of total offense, said. “We tried to go deep with the ball, and (I) made some plays with my feet as well.”

But the Friars (3-8) would get no closer, thanks in part to Mastrocola’s masterful punt. The 52-yard boot left Nelson with 1:23 on the clock and 98 yards to score without any timeouts. The Patriots’ defense forced four incompleti­ons.

“I’m just thinking beat him and pressure the quarterbac­k,” Parker said. “As soon as you get in the quarterbac­k’s face, the game is over.”

Carroll (5-5) will play Cardinal O’Hara Saturday to see who will represent the Catholic League in the District 12 4A final. They looked comfortabl­e on the Lions’ home turf Sunday even with — and because of — their backup quarterbac­k.

“That’s just our team. Our culture,” Parker said. “When we walk onto the field, we have that swag and mentality that we know what we’re doing.”

 ?? PETE BANNAN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Archbishop Carroll running back Joshua Bowman, here fighting off Cardinal O’Hara tacklers in a game earlier this season, ran for a touchdown Sunday to help Carroll beat Bonner & Prendergas­t, 17-14, and book a rematch with O’Hara in the District 12 Class 4A final.
PETE BANNAN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Archbishop Carroll running back Joshua Bowman, here fighting off Cardinal O’Hara tacklers in a game earlier this season, ran for a touchdown Sunday to help Carroll beat Bonner & Prendergas­t, 17-14, and book a rematch with O’Hara in the District 12 Class 4A final.

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