The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

North Branford could have wild weekend

- By Michael Fornabaio mfornabaio@ctpost.com; @fornabaioc­tp

North Branford played an thrillamin­ute game Friday. It could have a thrillamin­ute weekend coming up.

The Thunderbir­ds went back and forth with Morgan, scoring 40 in the second quarter, winning 7232. They’re 62, a win away from their best record since they went 122 and went to the Class S final in 2014.

“At the start of the season, we had three or four guys who weren’t available to us for whatever reason,” coach Mark Basil said. “This last game, we actually had our full team. We survived against Ellington (137 on Nov. 2) still down three good players. Now, this past week, it felt great to have so much depth.”

In particular, the extra bodies let Tyler DiNapoli stay fresh at running back without having to play defense. Including kicking one extra point, DiNapoli scored 36 points Friday, running nine times for 197 yards.

“For a feature running back, (going both ways) is asking a lot, especially playing outside linebacker,” Basil said.

On Friday, the Thunderbir­ds only ran seven or eight secondhalf plays, Basil said. One was DiNapoli’s last touchdown. Their last score came on Aiden Ferrucci’s kickoff return.

“Morgan did a good job throwing the ball,” Basil said. “We felt at any point there could be a turnover. We went to halftime (up 6026) not feeling comfortabl­e.”

Basil said quarterbac­k Brandon Fratta has grown mentally. Alex Clinton and Nate Raymond have been top targets for him, and they both play defensive back as well. Inside linebacker­s Xavior Cognata and Alex LeMere have stepped up, and teams are running away from tackle Stathi Gianniotis, Basil said.

Raymond and Cognata are seniors, but the rest of those players are juniors. It’s a juniorheav­y team that sits 13th in the Class S playoff race right now.

With two home games remaining, though, including Friday against the Windsor Locks coop, the Thunderbir­ds can gain ground if other teams lose. They can pick up up to 50 bonus points this weekend, too, if teams they beat win this week. The swing is so wild that North Branford could wake up Sunday morning in playoff position, at least in accumulate­d points, or could be eliminated.

“Are we a team that deserves to be in the playoffs? I guess if we get the wins we need, great,” Basil said. “If we get in, it’ll be a great experience.”

UHOH, SCENARIOS: The boss warned not to get too deeply into playoff minutiae here. Disappoint­ed, as playoff minutiae are among our favorite things, we push on with some of the (yes, unofficial) clinching possibilit­ies in this limitedsch­edule Week 11 (and only Week 11’s possibilit­ies here; we’ll revisit next week):

In Class LL, one simple scenario to start: Cheshire clinches its first playoff spot since 2009 with a win over Harding. The Rams could also lock it up if both Fairfield Prep and Hamden lose, which would secure Greenwich a spot, too.

Hall and Conard end their seasons against each other on Saturday. The winner will be clinging to playoff position but needing a lot of help next week to stay there. The loser is eliminated. Naugatuck and Shelton would also be eliminated with losses.

In Class L, Berlin clinches with a win over New Britain to end its season on Saturday. It’s still in decent shape with a loss, but it’ll have to sweat the bonuses — that is, the 10 points it’ll get for any wins this week and next by teams the Redcoats already defeated. Speaking of bonuses, it appears New Canaan can clinch a spot on a tiebreaker this week if New London beats Killingly.

There are a lot of games this weekend for Class M contenders, complicati­ng things a bit.

Friday ends the season for two Class M contenders, Killingly and the SMSA coop, and they both can clinch playoff spots with wins, Killingly against New London, SMSA against the Stafford coop. Both could be sweating with a loss: Three teams on the outside right now have similar point ceilings to Killingly and SMSA with losses, but all three have two games remaining.

Those three teams, incidental­ly, are New Fairfield, Watertown and the Windsor Locks coop. If no more than one of the three wins this weekend, Waterford clinches a spot.

ATI and Thames River are seventh and eighth in Class M in accumulate­d points. They meet Saturday in Danbury. The winner guarantees itself 180 points, which for ATI could be enough to clinch this weekend, depending on bonus points or losses by those three teams chasing. The loser is alive to Thanksgivi­ng.

In Class S, Sheehan can get in with a win over Hamden and losses by both the Stafford coop and North Branford. (As mentioned, North Branford has a slew of potential bonuses this week that could affect a few scenarios.) If both Stafford and North Branford lose, Woodland and Plainfield clinch.

UHOH, MATH: The playoffs are based on CIAC points earned per game (with some limited exceptions: 100 points per win, 10 points for each game won by teams you beat, additional points for beating teams in bigger classes), which is simple for 10game schedules with no tie games: Take the points earned, and drop the zero at the end. But, one headsup: Class S Griswold/ Wheeler is the one team still in contention that only has nine scheduled games. Divide accordingl­y.

(Would it be easier to think of the Wolverines’ having 833 pointswith­anasterisk now, earning a potential 200 more for a win over Plainfield on Thanksgivi­ng, and getting 11 for each of four potential bonuses for a maximum of 1,078 points, to put them on even terms with the 10gamers? No? Never mind.)

CAPITAL D: Capital Prep/Achievemen­t First beat Windham 4426 on Thursday behind six forced turnovers, four of which the Trailblaze­rs took back for touchdowns.

Jamel Lawrence returned a fumble for a touchdown and was in on 18 tackles. Jahvon Olmstead had eight tackles, including a sack, forced a fumble, recovered three and took two of them for scores. And Kadeem McKnight forced two fumbles and returned a fumble 78 yards for a touchdown.

DIFFERENCE: The second half of Greenwich’s 277 win over Ridgefield was even on the scoreboard, 77. Ridgefield ran 48 plays to Greenwich’s 19. It was 2912 in plays when Cardinals lineman Ed Iuteri cramped up and left the game. Receiver/defensive back A.J. Barber had departed earlier.

Greenwich had a defensive touchdown in the second half, which might normally contribute to such a disparity, except that the Cardinals recovered the ensuing kickoff.

The game ended on the Greenwich 1yard line with the 14th play of a Ridgefield drive.

CLICK ‘LIKE’: The GameTimeCT Instagram account has pressbox video of Valley Regional/Old Lyme lineman Ben Conrad taking a snap and running for a touchdown in a 3512 win over Old Saybrook/Westbrook.

CLICK ‘LIKE’ AGAIN: As seen on Twitter @HandTigers­FB, Hand players did some yard work for coach Dave Mastroiann­i, recovering from cancer surgery, and his family.

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