The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HOW HIGH SCHOOL TEAM SURVIVED THE HURRICANE

Storm closes school for two weeks, but can’t stop football team.

- By Adam Krohn For the AJC

When Benedictin­e coach Danny Britt heard the call for Savannah to evacuate ahead of Hurricane Matthew, he decided to stay put. A few days later, as Friday night turned into Saturday morning, he began to wonder if he’d made the best choice for his family.

“At the time, I was confident in staying,” said Britt, who’s now in his sixth season at Benedictin­e, a private military school located in Savannah, which came close to a direct hit from Matthew when it made its U.S. landfall in South Carolina on Oct. 8. “At 1:30 Saturday morning I was no longer confident. It’s amazing, really. The wind was so extreme and random. I’d look out the window and trees were bent in one direction, then I’d look across the house out another window and trees were blowing in a completely different direction. I thought, how is this happening?”

While Matthew spared Savannah of greater damage suffered in other areas, including South Carolina and Haiti, the coastal city was still hit hard. Homes were severely damaged. Piers and

boardwalks were destroyed. For Benedictin­e, damage included flooding to parts of the campus and its athletics facilities and loss of power.

Though it could have easily been much worse for the Benedictin­e community, the fact remains that Matthew rolled through in the middle of the Cadets’ football season. The Cadets are currently Class AA’s No. 1 ranked team with a 7-0 record and are two seasons removed from a state title. Nothing to date could stop the Cadets on the football field, not even Atlanta’s St. Pius, a ranked school from AAAA that they beat on the road Sept. 2.

But Matthew was a different story. He stopped the Cadets in their tracks.

On the Monday before Matthew arrived, it became obvious to school officials that it was very serious, and that action had to be taken.

“We saw it coming and you’re thinking (Matthew) could go here, or go there,” Britt said. “By Tuesday, it was clear we needed to think about doing something (about the football schedules) because our JV team played Brunswick and our freshman team played Glynn Academy. It was an open week for the varsity team. So we immediatel­y moved (the freshman and JV games).”

On Tuesday, the varsity team practiced. As Matthew would have it, that would be the last practice the team would have together for an entire week — a layoff unheard of in the middle of a football season.

“As we went through (Tuesday), we realized we were going to have to evacuate,” Britt said. “Our principal (Dennis A. Daly) called the staff in and said today would be the last day of school for this week.”

It would actually be the last day of school for the next two weeks. For the Cadets, team unity was fractured by the evacuation­s. Players scattered all over, to Atlanta or Athens, or left the state for Alabama or North Carolina.

Instead of ramping up for a crucial Region 2-AA home game against Toombs County scheduled for Oct. 14, the Cadets were in limbo. A far cry from the intense environmen­t that’s created by a midseason practice.

By Oct. 10, Matthew was gone but the damage was there to stay. The school was without power and would remain closed through the week. Football practice was canceled and, more significan­t, it was evident Savannah State, where Cadets home games are played, was unfit to host the Toombs County game. That was also supposed to be Benedictin­e’s homecoming game, but not any longer. The two schools arranged for the game to be played at Toombs County.

By Oct. 11, most of the Cadets team had returned to Savannah. Though Benedictin­e was closed, the players were itching to get back on the field. They were days from having to travel to Lyons for a game with huge playoff implicatio­ns and they weren’t going to sit around any longer. They were in the process of organizing a players-only practice amongst themselves when, finally, Britt informed the team they could practice that day.

“On Monday night we got approval from the headmaster (Rev. Frank Ziemkiewic­z) and (Daly). A number of our kids and some starters were still evacuated and others still had no power so they needed another 24 hours.”

Only two days before game day, the Cadets conducted their first full varsity practice in more than a week.

“It felt weird,” starting quarterbac­k Nick Iannone said. “It felt like the first practice of the year.”

The first few practices were about getting back into game shape. Or at least, as much as possible. The practices consisted of almost entirely condition drills.

“You could tell they had lost that,” said Britt, referring to midseason conditioni­ng. “We lift every day, even on game days. There’s a very standard routine Monday through Friday that we’re accustomed to and that was thrown off kilter.”

More than anything, the players were just relieved to get back on the field. But with just three days to prepare, would the Cadets be able to put the past week behind them and play a football game?

“We knew once we got back on the field, we’d be ready and focused,” Cadets senior slot back John Wesley Kennedy said. “I just wanted the team as a whole to show it.”

By the end of the first quarter, the Cadets led 7-0. In the second quarter, the game began slowing down for them and they returned to midseason form, jumping to a 21-7 lead heading into halftime. By game’s end, the Cadets had completed their mission and beat Toombs County 42-13 to take full control of the region and inch closer to a No. 1 seed for the playoffs.

Cadets running back Tyleek Collins led the way, rushing for 220 yards and two touchdowns on 13 carries, which earned him Georgia High School Football Daily “Top Performanc­es” considerat­ions.

On Tuesday, Oct. 18, two weeks to the day since Benedictin­e last held class, the school opened its doors for the first time since the threat of Matthew emerged. A sense of normalcy is slowly starting to return as students, faculty and staff begin to charge back into the grind.

While it’s far from normal for a team to be separated for a week in the middle of the season, all things considered it may have benefited the Cadets as the regular season winds down.

“I think it brought us closer as a team,” Kennedy said. “We learned that the next practice is not promised. We came back working a lot harder. I think, at the end of the day, it made us a better team.”

 ?? STEPHEN B. MORTON / AP ?? A large tree felled by Hurricane Matthew just misses crashing onto Savannah’s Casimir Pulaski Monument, one of the historic coastal city’s most famous tourist attraction­s.
STEPHEN B. MORTON / AP A large tree felled by Hurricane Matthew just misses crashing onto Savannah’s Casimir Pulaski Monument, one of the historic coastal city’s most famous tourist attraction­s.
 ?? RUSS BYNUM / AP ?? The top of a tree knocked down by Hurricane Matthew smothers the front of a large home near downtown Savannah, which suffered widespread damage.
RUSS BYNUM / AP The top of a tree knocked down by Hurricane Matthew smothers the front of a large home near downtown Savannah, which suffered widespread damage.

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