Las Vegas Review-Journal

KANTOWSKI

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Saturday against Corn Bible Academy.

There’s a certain charm to eight-man football played in the small towns of America. Starting with the names of the opponents.

For every teeming metropolis, there are dozens of dot-on-the-road map towns, and there is high school football that unifies them. It’s like a barn raising every Friday night.

The dot on the map called Alamo has a post office and a library and a Mormon church and two filling stations and a grill inside the Sinclair station called Chester’s Chicken to Go. A little south of town there is a wildlife refuge; a few miles to the north is an extraterre­strial highway. No, none of the friendly folks with whom I spoke has ever seen a little green man.

Alamo also is home to an out-of-this-world eight-man football team. Out here, E.T. doesn’t phone home. He phones in a good play for third-and-long.

Pahranagat Valley’s prep football winning streak is the third-longest on record, regardless of classifica­tion.

The 11-man standard belongs to mighty De La Salle from the Oakland, California, suburbs, which won 151 in a row from 1992 to 2003. There were more than 25,000 spectators at Qwest Field in Seattle when the Spartans lost 39-20 to Bellevue from Washington in the 2004 season opener, ending the streak.

They showed the highlights on ESPN.

ESPN did not make it to Alamo on Friday night. But two years ago, NBC correspond­ent Harry Smith walked the sidelines during Pahranagat Valley’s victory over the Muckers from Tonopah. That was win No. 72 in the streak.

The Panthers’ last defeat was 26-24 to Carlin in the 2007 state semifinals. It hasn’t been an entire generation of Higbees since Pahranagat Valley last lost a football game, but it seems like it.

So this was a night to celebrate a fantastic achievemen­t. It also was a night to look back at the bizarre turn of events that nearly ended the streak last September.

The Panthers stopped a gadget play against the Thatcher (California) Toads on fifth-and-12 from the Pahranagat 25-yard line to escape with a 34-30 victory.

That’s right. Fifth-and-12.

The guys on the chain gang apparently became confused during the final series and forgot to switch the down marker. It happens sometimes in eightman football.

Ken Higbee, a tireless and unassuming molder of young men — Higbee’s father, Vaughn, was the Panthers’ first football coach; Ken’s brother, Brian, is one of his assistants; Ken’s son, Christian, is a running back/linebacker on this year’s team; Ken’s nephew, Garett, is an interior lineman — did not complain. Quite the contrary, he said it was a well-officiated game.

“The streak is completely secondary to everything we are doing.” Higbee said after the Panthers stopped that double reverse and again on the field before Friday’s game. “It’s (about) more than football here. It’s about these kids.”

The next day after that win against Thatcher, it was about taking his kids to the beach.

But Friday, it was mostly about football, and about molding young men, and getting the Panthers’ reserves some quality playing time in the second half — the second-stringers work hard in practice, too, Ken Higbee told his players at halftime.

It never did rain in Alamo, and there really wasn’t a whole lot of fanfare about the Panthers setting the winning-streak record. But everybody agreed the sage up here smelled awfully sweet. Las Vegas Review-Journal sports columnist Ron Kantowski can be reached at rkantowski@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0352. Follow him on Twitter: @ ronkantows­ki

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