The Phoenix

Pope John Paul II rallies past Phoenixvil­le

Gray throws 4 TDs in Golden Panthers’ bounceback win

- By Rob Senior

ROYERSFORD >> Pope John Paul II proved they were no fluke or early-season wonder last week, going the distance with Frontier Division leader Pottsgrove until the bitter end of a 35-28 defeat.

But letdowns go both ways, and after the tough defeat the host Panthers came out flat for the first quarter-plus Saturday against a resilient Phoenixvil­le squad.

Luckily, Coach Rory Graver sped up the tempo, and quarterbac­k Kamal Gray responded with four touchdown passes—three to Justin Kormos—as the Panthers went to 6-1 (2-1 PAC Frontier) with a 28-12 victory.

Gray threw for 269 yards, striking twice each in the second and third quarters for all the points PJP would need.

“I agree we came out flat — that’s my responsibi­lity, during the week, to have us ready to go from the beginning,” said Graver. “Defensivel­y though, I’m happy with our game plan.”

With the exception of an outstandin­g day from Phoenixvil­le back Travis Pannella (20 carries, 191 yards, 2 TDs) the Phantom offense was held silent for the balance of the day. The Panthers registered four sacks, the last of which saw Bryan Bendig force a fumble that sniffed out Phoenixvil­le’s last hope.

“I’m happy with the first half, I thought the kids came out and played hard, played like we’re capable of performing,” said Don Grinstead, head coach of the Phantoms.

The early going saw a field-position battle ultimately won by PJP when quarterbac­k Gray dropped into his part-time job as punter and unfurled a 50yard bomb that pinned Phoenixvil­le at its own 14. But from there, the Phantoms embarked on a 12play drive featuring the hard-charging Pannella, who amassed 63 yards on the drive, including the icebreakin­g 20-yard TD run. After a failed two-point conversion, Phoenixvil­le led 6-0.

But PJP had learned from their methodical opening possession­s and went tempo, covering 62 yards in just under 1:30 in taking the lead, 7-6, on a one-yard Steve Skarbek TD catch. “The tempo was just to give us a spark at that point,” said coach Graver.

The Panthers would reassume possession with 1:17 before halftime, and just as it appeared the drive would stall out as the quarter ended, Gray lofted a pass that appeared destined to land just shy of the goal line.

Under any other circumstan­ces, the pass could be called “ill-advised.” But with only three seconds on the clock, the Panthers had nothing to lose — and everything to gain, as they realized when Kormos outjumped a pair of defenders, corralled the 38-yard bomb and tumbled into the end zone, giving the Panthers a 14-6 lead and for Kormos, vindicatio­n after an earlier drop.

“That was a killer for us,” agreed Grinstead. “Going into halftime down 7-6 would’ve been big for us.”

“It felt great, but I should’ve had the first one,” said Kormos. “But it made me focus on catching the ball — after that, I wasn’t worried about finding the end zone until I had the ball secured.”

Clearly, Gray’s confidence in the sophomore wasn’t shaken, as evidenced when Gray scrambled away from trouble and found Kormos in the right corner for a 38-yard score early in the second half that made it 21-6 PJP. Minutes later, Gray turned in a play that arguably topped the first-half ending Hail Mary and evoked many spectators’ memories of an oft-replayed Donovan McNabb highlight from a Monday Night Football game years ago.

Forced out of the pocket to his right, Gray cut back across the width of the field to his left before stopping on a dime and hitting Kormos for his fourth TD pass of the day, and the third connection between the quarterbac­k-receiver duo. All in attendance were in awe of the play — except the receiver.

“I should’ve had four touchdowns today,” Kormos lamented.

Pannella would go off left tackle in the late going for an 85-yard TD, his second of the day for Phoenixvil­le (25, 0-3 PAC Frontier) to complete the scoring.

“If you look at our games — all the way back to the opener with Great Valley — it’s a couple plays each week. A penalty, a fumble, you name it. We’re fighting our own success. Only we can control that, and until we get rid of that problem, it will continue to come down to a couple plays.

And unfortunat­ely for the Phantoms, Gray and Kormos were all too happy to make play after play on Saturday.

“There’s a lot of competitio­n on our offense — we have a great quarterbac­k, and we have a number of receivers who can all make the big play,” Kormos concludes.

 ?? DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE ?? Pope John Paul II’s Kamal Gray throw a pass during a game earlier this season against Upper Perkiomen. Gray threw for four TDs in Saturday’s win over Phoenixvil­le.
DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE Pope John Paul II’s Kamal Gray throw a pass during a game earlier this season against Upper Perkiomen. Gray threw for four TDs in Saturday’s win over Phoenixvil­le.

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