Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Unrivaled rivalry

Smith knows the importance of St. Thomas vs. Lakeland

- By David Furones South Florida Sun Sentinel dfurones@sunsentine­l.com / @DavidFuron­es_

Today’s players at St. Thomas Aquinas can’t possibly truly grasp the historical significan­ce of playing Lakeland in a high school football state championsh­ip game.

After all, they were 8 years old, at most, last time the two faced off.

“In reality, they don’t,” said George Smith, the longtime Raiders football coach who still serves as the school’s athletic director. “They’ve heard stories or whatever. It’s not even really about that. This is another game that you play to try to get to your goal.”

St. Thomas is focused on Friday’s 8 p.m. kickoff at Orlando’s Camping World Stadium for the 7A crown, but even though a win would tie St.Thomas for the state record of 11 football titles, this game will become part of a larger series. And Smith sure can provide that historical context. He was there for all of it — the four title game meetings over five years last decade.

It’s hard to believe now, with St. Thomas going for a fourth championsh­ip in five seasons and eight in the last 12, but before that run, Lakeland was the team Aquinas couldn’t get past for state supremacy, dropping three consecutiv­e finals from 2004 to 2006.

It even had national implicatio­ns. Two of those Dreadnaugh­ts teams were national champions (2005, 2006). When St. Thomas got to exact revenge, in 2008, the Raiders won their first of two national crowns.

That, however, is not how Smith viewed the 56-7 beatdown his dominant 2008 squad delivered to Lakeland.

“Revenge is something that has never mind,” he said.

But it sure had to feel satisfying after nothing but heartbreak against the Dreadnaugh­ts before that. The series reached its peak in 2006, when Lakeland won a 45-42 double-overtime final.

The Raiders came back from down 35-14. Down a field goal in the second overtime, facing fourthand-goal at the 1-yard line, Smith went for the win. Jeremiah Harden took the handoff and was stopped just shy of the end zone. Lakeland won.

Smith recalls: “We had to come back to get into it. To lose it like that… Two teams that didn’t want to quit. That was an epic game.”

St. Thomas was that close to knocking off a team that would split a national title with Southlake Carroll in Texas. The Raiders came back, winning the 5A championsh­ip against Kissimmee Osceola in 2007, crushing Lakeland in 2008, winning it all again in 2010 and 2012 and notching a three-peat from 2014 to 2016.

Before the wild one in 2006, Aquinas had to take its earlier lumps against Lakeland, and they weren’t pretty. The 2004 and 2005 crossed my games were won by a combined 70-17 Dreadnaugh­ts advantage.

Lakeland coach Bill Castle, holding that post since 1976, still leads his team to this day. Smith and Castle remain close.

“When I got out of coaching in 2011, he was the first guy to call me,” said Smith, who described every interactio­n he’s had recently with Castle. “They’ve just been special situations between two old guys that are still involved in high school sports.

“I have a lot of respect for him, and I think he feels the same way about me as I feel about him.”

When MaxPreps did a top 50 high school football coaches of all time, the website put Smith, with a 361-66 career record of 34 seasons, at No. 12 and Castle at 19.

In its top teams all-time list, the 2005 Lakeland unit was 21st. Aquinas’ 2008 and 2010 teams were ranked 30th and 34th, respective­ly.

The Raiders and Dreadnaugh­ts also met three consecutiv­e seasons from 1996 to 1998, with St. Thomas winning the middle matchup en route to a state title in 1997. The 1996 battle was in the championsh­ip game. In all, Lakeland Class 7A

No. 1 Lakeland (14-0) vs. No. 1 St. Thomas Aquinas (13-1), Friday, 8 p.m. After falling to Venice in last year’s state semifinal and missing out on the chance to win a fourth straight championsh­ip, the Raiders wanted to be where they are today — back in Orlando. Now that they’ve made it, they’ve got to face an old rival looking for its first championsh­ip since 2006. I think the game will be won in the trenches. If the Raiders’ talented defensive line,which includes Alabama commit Braylen Ingraham, Miami commit Jason Munoz, four-star sophomore Tyreak Sapp and other talented players, can get past four-star tight end Keon Zipperer and four-star guard Deyavie Hammond, they’ll be able to stop 2,000-yard rusher Demarkcus Bowman. If they stop Bowman, they should win. Class 5A

No. 3 North Marion (12-2) vs. No. 2 Cardinal Gibbons (12-2), Friday, 3 p.m. This is a storybook run for the Chiefs. Cardinal Gibbons has never won a state title before, and the one time it did, the Chiefs suffered a 44-14 defeat. Coach Matt DuBuc was on that 1990 team, and now he’s led his team back to within one game of a championsh­ip. It looked like Gibbons’ title hopes might have come crashing down when Kentucky-bound quarterbac­k Nik Scalzo suffered a season-ending ACL team, but sophomore Brody Palhegyi has filled in admirably. Maybe more important is how well the Chiefs’ defense has played. Trevis Robinson had a program-record 5.5 sacks in Gibbons’ win over Tampa Jesuit in the state semi, and with Robinson, defensive end Khris Bogle, linebacker Yahweh Jeudy and more talented players, I think the Chiefs get that elusive title behind a dominant defensive effort. Class 3A leads St. Thomas in their all-time series in state finals 5-2.

For Lakeland, this is the school’s first return to a title game since that 2008 defeat, but Smith said this team, which MaxPreps ranks sixth in Florida and No. 44 nationally, is like those old ones.

“They look just like they did back in ’04, ’05,” said Smith, as Aquinas is second and 13th, respective­ly, in those same rankings. “Great running back [ junior Demarkcus Bowman], tough kids on the lines. Typical. They’re going to come after you and try to beat you up.”

There are connection­s to those days for current assistants to Raiders coach Roger Harriott — Bryan Baucom, Jay Connolly, Jim Gazzillo and Wes Carroll, who was the quarterbac­k of the 2006 team that orchestrat­ed the comeback to force overtime. While there will be reminiscin­g, they are focused on assuring Friday night becomes a lasting memory for the right reason.

Said Smith: thinking about hand, and it’s

Trust me.” “They are the task at a big task.

Thomas Aquinas 27, Lakeland 21.

Marion 10.

St.

Cardinal Gibbons 14, North

No. 1 King’s Academy (12-1) vs. No. 1 Chaminade-Madonna, Saturday, 10 a.m. King’s Academy has had a wonderful season, but it has not faced a team like ChaminadeM­adonna. Chaminade has Division I players at nearly every position, and is two-deep with future college players at some positions. King’s has shown the ability to fight and stick with all their opponents so far, but Chaminade’s talent level may just prove to be overwhelmi­ng.

Chaminade-Madonna 35, King’s Academy 10.

 ?? JOE CAVARETTA/SUN SENTINEL ??
JOE CAVARETTA/SUN SENTINEL

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