Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Blocking (quarter)back Milligan helps clear path to Haven victory

- By Matt Smith msmith@delcotimes.com

NETHER PROVIDENCE » Sam Milligan encapsulat­ed what it means to be a Strath Haven football player with one inordinate play from a quarterbac­k.

It had nothing to do with the junior’s ability to throw or run the ball.

Milligan, who wears many hats for the Panthers, became the lead blocker on running back Matt Shuler’s 24-yard touchdown run in the second quarter Friday night. Milligan handed the ball to Shuler and started looking for someone to hit. He engaged with Academy Park’s Eric Willis, one of the top defensive backs and all-around players in Delco, and blocked the Knights senior from getting anywhere near Shuler.

As Shuler crossed the goal line Milligan drove Willis into the turf. The score put Haven ahead to stay and it was the turning point that put the No. 2 Panthers in complete control of their District 1 Class 5A semifinal bout with the sixth-seeded Knights. Haven dominated the second half and rolled to a 34-6 win.

“That felt great,” Milligan said. “Our Olinemen do it every day, our running backs do it every day, so it’s nice to be able to get in on that, too. Their whole team was fast, just a bunch of great athletes. I know that Matt’s behind me and he’s going to get in regardless of what I do. It makes it a little bit less stressful for him.”

Shuler amassed a game-high 107 yards on the ground with two touchdowns. He was not surprised to see Milligan taking matters into his own hands on his first scoring run.

“He’s an amazing player and he does literally everything,” Shuler said. “He can run, he can throw the ball, he’ll do literally everything for the team.”

Milligan also shined defensivel­y in the secondary, covering AP’s fleet-footed wide receivers. Oh, and he had a 47-yard punt and was the holder on extra points.

“That’s all attitude and hustle right there,” senior running back Chase Barlow said of Milligan’s key block. “I love having him on my team. He did that for me against Radnor a couple weeks ago and

it was the best play of the game. Personally, those are my favorite types of plays and to see him doing that is great. He’s a quarterbac­k, hustling all the way downfield. He’s got a lot of heart and determinat­ion.”

The Panthers will play for a district championsh­ip for the first time since 2010 next week when they travel to No. 1 West Chester Rustin, which defeated fifth-seeded Plymouth Whitemarsh, 1914.

Haven overpowere­d an athletic Knights defense and stuck to what had worked under coach Kevin Clancy for decades. Put simply, the Knights had no answer for the Wing-T offense, with Shuler, Barlow and Anthony Crawford picking up yards in chunks. The top-ranked run offense in Delco averaged 7.9 yards per carry.

AP’s tough defensive front, led by Tristan Hodges, Damir Sammons and Ibrahim Sanogo, did everything they could to combat Haven’s discipline­d offensive line unit consisting of Ben Farabaugh, Nick Filos, Jack Beck, Ethan Barrar, Jake Millett, Mason

Green and Nate Perlman. They were just too much for the co-Del Val League champion Knights (9-3) to overcome.

“Our whole coaching staff has won state championsh­ips here, so they all know what it takes and it isn’t anything new to them,” said Milligan, who completed his only two passes for 43 yards and ran for 49 yards on six carries. “It’s nice to play for so many guys who know what they’re doing. From the start it was do your work every day, do the same thing every day and you’ll come out on top.”

AP had success running the ball early on. Terrence Oliver carried the ball 15 times for 97 yards and scored the Knights’ lone touchdown. He had an 88-yard touchdown run erased on a holding call in the first quarter.

The Knights fumbled the opening kickoff, a short line drive by Charlie Shankweile­r that was recovered by the Panthers. AP eventually forced a turnover on downs inside its 10-yard line, but Haven responded on its next possession. After a long scramble by Milligan, Barlow rumbled straight

ahead across the goal line from four yards out to put the Panthers ahead 7-0.

“I think we had to just run straight because they’re so fast,” said Barlow, who ran for 67 yards on 13 carries. “There were two times I tried to get the edge and I wasn’t able to. So, I think it was important that we stayed on them going up the middle.”

The backbreake­r came on Haven’s first drive of the second half. AP tried an onside kick that skittered out of bounds. Barlow capped a nine-play, 46-yard drive with a two-yard TD run to give the Panthers a 14-point advantage.

On the ensuing drive Academy Park tried a fake punt run on fourth down, but ended up losing two yards. This set the Panthers up with a short field. Two plays later, Milligan went on a bootleg and connected with Crawford for a 29-yard touchdown pass

Shuler capped the scoring with his second TD run in the fourth quarter. Aiden Sutherland put the exclamatio­n mark on Haven’s win with an intercepti­on of Darrell Fields late in regulation.

 ?? PETE BANNAN — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Strath Haven defender Aiden Sutherland, right, intercepts a pass late in the game as the Panthers ice a 34-6victory over Academy Park Friday night at King field.
PETE BANNAN — MEDIANEWS GROUP Strath Haven defender Aiden Sutherland, right, intercepts a pass late in the game as the Panthers ice a 34-6victory over Academy Park Friday night at King field.
 ?? PETE BANNAN — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Strath Haven running back Anthony Crawford scores in the third quarter on Friday evening.
PETE BANNAN — MEDIANEWS GROUP Strath Haven running back Anthony Crawford scores in the third quarter on Friday evening.

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