Miami Herald (Sunday)

Northweste­rn sacks Central; Aquinas loses

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com

Miami Northweste­rn and Miami Central both waited more than 10 months for Friday.

They both won state championsh­ips late in 2019 and then waited out nearly a year worth of delays, postponeme­nts and outright cancellati­ons because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It was fitting, then, to have the archrivals and top-10 national powerhouse­s unofficial­ly usher in the start of high school football in Miami-Dade County.

And their long-awaited meeting delivered. Northweste­rn’s defense, always the backbone of the storied program, made two redzone stops in the final five minutes to open the season with a 21-14 win at Traz Powell Stadium.

“It built up to the fourth quarter,” Bulls coach Max Edwards said, “which is meant to be.”

Northweste­rn, the reigning Class 5A champion and winner of three straight state titles, never trailed after jumping out to a 14-0 lead in the first four minutes, but Central, the reigning Class 6A champion, had two chances to force overtime in the final four minutes.

A 72-yard run by star running back Amari Daniels set the Rockets up at the Bulls’ 12-yard line with less than five minutes to go, trailing 21-14. Northweste­rn’s front seven blew up the drive. Bulls outside linebacker Carlton Thomas logged back-to-back sacks, Northweste­rn forced an incomplete pass, then dragged down Central quarterbac­k Keyone Jenkins for no gain on fourth down with less than two minutes remaining.

The Bulls gave the ball right back, though. Northweste­rn quarterbac­k Taron Dickens fumbled the snap and the Rockets jumped on the loose ball to get another chance at the Bulls’ 25 with 1:41 left. After a seconddown scramble by Jenkins put Central at Northweste­rn’s 20, the Bull’s pass rush teed up again. Bulls defensive tackle Michael Marshall sacked Jenkins on third down and Northweste­rn came up with another turnover on downs after Jenkins’ final completion fell a yard short of picking up the first down.

The Bulls piled up 10 sacks, including five in the fourth quarter. They also scored a defensive touchdown in the first quarter when outside linebacker Patrick Payton, who is orally committed to the Nebraska Cornhusker­s, returned a fumble for a touchdown. They added another takeaway in the second on an intercepti­on by safety Kamren Kinchens, who is orally committed to the Miami Hurricanes.

“I was just as shocked as you. I knew we were going to be winded, due to the fact that we weren’t in shape because we didn’t get the summer or a spring,” Edwards said, “but they were good. They kept fighting.”

On Northweste­rn’s final defensive stand, the Bulls pressed star wide receiver Romello Brinson into duty in the secondary. Injuries and cramps left Northweste­rn shorthande­d, so it turned to perhaps its best player to cover talented sophomore wide receiver Lamar Seymore on the outside. He stuck to his fellow Hurricanes’ commit and held him to 9 yards on the final play when he needed 10.

“I had to. A lot of guys going down,” Brinson said. “I had to step up for the team.”

It bookended a dominant night for the four-star wideout. On the third play of the game, he hauled in a 77yard touchdown to put the Bulls ahead 7-0 in just 1:21. Payton’s scoop and score pushed the lead to 14-0 with 8:24 left in the opening quarter.

Jenkins guided two resounding answers for the Rockets. On the next drive, he went 3 for 3 for 32 yards and hit wide receiver Zaylan Reese on a 9-yard slant for a touchdown to cut the lead to 14-7. Central’s next drive lasted only one play after a bad snap on a punt gave the Rockets the ball at the Bulls’ 37. Jenkins placed a perfect outside-shoulder throw to wide receiver Robert McMinn along the right sideline to tie the game at 14-14 with 3:16 left in the first.

Finally, the defensive struggle both sides anticipate­d set in. Jenkins, who started 8 of 9 for 118 yards and two touchdowns, finished 18 of 27 for 185 yards and got sacked 10 times. Dickens, who threw a 77yard touchdown on his second attempt, finished 12 of 19 for 146 yards. Even Daniels, who had 65 yards on his first eight carries, added a late 72-yard run to finish with 146 yards on 15 carries. Otherwise he had only eight yards on six second-half carries.

Northweste­rn finally broke through with 5:25 left in the third quarter. Bulls running back Siddiq Jackson found a hole on the right side of Central’s defense and burst through for a 46-yard touchdown.

Both teams are setting out to defend their state championsh­ips this season — two of only five MiamiDade County public schools opting in to the Florida

High School Athletic Associatio­n’s state series — which means only three regular-season game apiece for the top-10 teams, according to the MaxPreps rankings.

For both teams, it was exactly the sort of benchmark challenge they needed.

“I feel like we set the tone for us, as far as our practice,’’ Edwards said. “They’re not happy with what we did, but they’re happy with the win.”

Cardinal Gibbons 17, St. Thomas Aquinas 10: Visiting Cardinal Gibbons returned a late intercepti­on for a touchdown and stunned St. Thomas Aquinas, the No. 3 team in the country in the MaxPreps rankings.

Chiefs defensive end Mason Thomas jumped a pass in the flat intended for star running back Anthony Hankerson and took it the length of the field to give Cardinal Gibbons a 17-7 lead with 3:11 remaining. The Raiders added a late field goal, but couldn’t recover a final onside kick and fell to their crosstown rival at home.

Plantation American Heritage 41, Venice 26: American Heritage forced Venice into seven turnovers, scored two defensive touchdowns and bounced back from its first loss of the season.

The Patriots opened the game on a 27-0 run, aided by two second-quarter pick sixes. First, defensive end Richard Thomas grabbed an intercepti­on and ran it back for a touchdown. Later in the quarter, safety James Williams, who is orally committed to the Miami Hurricanes, picked off Indians quarterbac­k Colin Blazek at the goal line and ran it back 99 yards for a touchdown.

A Columbus 16, Killian 7: The Explorers, who won’t defend their Class 8A title this season, jumped out to a 10-0 lead in the first half and specialist Alejandro Prado made three field goals to help Columbus hold off the Cougars at Tropical Park.

Norland 23, Carol

City 19: Norland opened its season Thursday. The Vikings shut out Carol City in the second half to rally

AAAfrom a 19-17 halftime deficit in the meeting between Miami Gardens rivals. Star running back Katravis Geter, who’s orally committed to the FIU Panthers, scored two touchdowns for Carol City in the loss.

St. Brendan (3-1) 48, Somerset Homestead 7: Damari Charlton was 9 of 12 for 179 yards and three touchdowns; Richard Dandridge had three receptions, 85 yards, three TDs; Isaac Brown had three carries for 86 yards and a TD; Christian Lowry had six tackles, one fumble recovery for one TD, and one intercepti­on for 35 yards.

ACROSS-COUNTRY

Undefeated Belen won its eighth consecutiv­e meet at the St. Thomas University Invite held at the university’s campus on Saturday.

The team scored a perfect 15 points in the varsity division in a field that included four teams. The team was led by Evean Torres, who finished first for the 5K two loop course in a time of 16:51. Second was Belen’s Joshua Ruiz, who finished with a time of 17:08.

The Wolverines have now beaten 126 teams across Florida this season. The team runs at Archbishop McCarthy next Saturday for the District Championsh­ip.

GIRLS’ VOLLEYBALL

Regional quarterfin­als — La Salle d. Gulliver (25-12, 25-21, 25-11): Kiara Alietti 4 aces, 2 assists, 17 digs; Emma Callaghan 1 ace, 4 kills, 5 blocks, 2 digs; Adriana Medina 3 aces, 11 assists, 11 digs; Angelina Cambo 1 ace, 7 kills, 1 assist, 7 digs. La Salle advances to the regional semifinals against St. Brendan on Tuesday.

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 ?? ANDREW ULOZA FOR THE MIAMI HERALD ?? Northweste­rn’s defense stiffened in the fourth quarter and held on for the win over Central thanks to a go-ahead 46-yard touchdown run by Bulls’ Siddiq Jackson (2).
ANDREW ULOZA FOR THE MIAMI HERALD Northweste­rn’s defense stiffened in the fourth quarter and held on for the win over Central thanks to a go-ahead 46-yard touchdown run by Bulls’ Siddiq Jackson (2).

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