The Signal

Ready to keep on rolling

Prep football: SCCS offense prepared for Morningsid­e

- By Dan Lovi Signal Staff Writer

The SCCS football team is coming off a huge 47-14 win last week over Northgate behind a spectacula­r display from quarterbac­k Blake Kirshner.

Kirshner and the Cardinals offense will look to repeat their strong performanc­e tonight at 7 p.m., when they take on Morningsid­e at Caroline Coleman Stadium in Inglewood.

The senior quarterbac­k went 18-for-26 for 362 passing yards last week. Hew threw four touchdowns and also ran in a score. Kirshner has 879 passing yards and 10 total touchdowns in three games so far this season.

“He’s an outstandin­g, one-of-a-kind talent,” senior wide receiver Kade Kalinske said about his quarterbac­k. “I think he will play D1 football. I see that in his future. He’s a great player and it’s been an amazing year so far with him.”

It helps that Kirshner has a plethora of weapons to throw to, including Kalinske, John Keane and brothers Ethan and Carson Schwesinge­r. Between the two of them, the Schwesinge­r brothers have amassed 477 receiving yards and five touchdowns in the team’s first three games.

Another weapon the Cardinals added this year is junior running back Lucas Pettee’s newfound catching ability. Pettee had eight receptions for 54 yards last season and has already surpassed that total this year with 11 catches for 194 receiving yards plus two touchdowns.

“I’ve watched him throughout the whole offseason train like a receiver. His hands are better. He trained with us and he grew into a receiving running back,” Kalinske said. “It’s been so helpful because now we can go fivewide, we can go empty in the backfield and they can’t cover five of us with our skill.”

Morningsid­e is 1-2 on the season, losing their first two games without scoring a point. They won their last game against Centennial 15-0 behind a strong defensive performanc­e. They’ve demonstrat­ed that they can get after the quarterbac­k, forcing two sack fumbles in their last game.

The Monarchs also boast a talented running

back, who Cardinals linebacker Ethan Frields believes will be the focus of their offense.

“What we’ve seen from film is that the biggest challenge will be their running back,” Frields said. “They run a simple offense, but they have a pretty good running back. We have to be able to play the run well as well as finishing tackles.”

With SCCS having played on Saturday and now tonight, they had to practice on an unusually short week.

The Cardinals utilized the services of the Performanc­e Lab of California to help them with stretches and rehab throughout the season. It definitely came in handy this week.

“Me personally, I’ve stayed in the ice tub all week,” Kalinske said with a laugh. “As a team we try to be as physical as we can throughout practice without getting anybody hurt. With the quick turnaround it’s kind of tough, but I think we’re ready.”

 ?? Courtesy Darcy Brown ?? Ethan Schwesinge­r (11) and his brother Carson have combined for 477 receiving yards and five touchdowns in the Cardinals’ first three games.
Courtesy Darcy Brown Ethan Schwesinge­r (11) and his brother Carson have combined for 477 receiving yards and five touchdowns in the Cardinals’ first three games.

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