Chattanooga Times Free Press

Meigs County, Whitwell take on playoff powerhouse­s

Meigs County, Whitwell take on perennial powers in state semis

- BY STEPHEN HARGIS STAFF WRITER

There is just one more hurdle to be cleared for the Chattanoog­a area’s two remaining teams in the TSSAA football playoffs to reach the BlueCross Bowl championsh­ip games. But for Meigs County in Class 2A and Whitwell in 1A — each 13-0 but both relatively new to continuing the season past Thanksgivi­ng — there are a pair of deep-rooted perennial playoff powers standing in the way tonight.

Trousdale County, which hosts Meigs, and Greenback, which travels to Whitwell, have combined for 16 state championsh­ip game appearance­s, 11 titles and more than 120 playoff wins. Conversely, Meigs County and Whitwell, both of which lost in the quarterfin­als last year, are in the semifinals for the first time in more than 20 years.

The last time Meigs reached the semis, it had to knock off another traditiona­l power, Alcoa, before falling in the 1995 championsh­ip game. The Tigers have reached the semifinals only two other times, losing there in 1993 and losing in the 1980 title game.

Whitwell is back in the semis for the first time since losing to eventual state champion Franklin Road Academy in 1991, the furthest the Tigers have ever advanced.

“We want it more than anybody. We play for each other and refuse to stop fighting and finding a way.”

— WHITWELL SENIOR HUDSON PETTY

“When you talk about teams with tradition in our state, Trousdale is one of the first ones you have to mention,” Meigs coach Jason Fitzgerald said. “They’re one of those teams that it just seems are right there every year challengin­g for a championsh­ip.”

Trousdale owns three championsh­ips in the past 10 seasons, and the losses this season for the Yellow Jackets (9-3) have been 16-12 to Lebanon, which reached the Class 6A playoffs; 13-7 in overtime to Whitwell; and 22-21 to Watertown, an Aug. 31 defeat that was avenged with a 15-8 win last week.

The Jackets have held seven of their past eight opponents to eight or fewer points, including a 35-0 thumping of Tyner in the second round of the playoffs. The Rams had averaged 40 points per game coming into that Nov. 9 matchup.

After hosting in the first three rounds and rolling by an average score of 34-10, top-ranked Meigs, the Region 2 champion, now travels to one of the most feared home-field advantages in the state. Region 4 runner-up Trousdale has won 21 of the past 23 playoff games it hosted.

“I’ve always heard about how tough it is, but this will be the first time I’ve ever taken a team there,” Fitzgerald said. “If you love good high school football, why wouldn’t you want to go experience that type atmosphere? It will be two good teams going at it.

“I would bet that most kids today don’t know anything about how many state championsh­ips Trousdale has won or the history of their program. Most of our kids don’t even know where it is. Our guys just show up and want to play and try to keep the run we’re on going.”

Similarly, Greenback has been a longtime contender in 1A, winning its second state title last season and looking to reach the championsh­ip game for a fourth straight season. The Cherokees (12-0), the Region 2 champions, will come to Whitwell riding a 20-game winning streak.

Whitwell, which already has set a school record for wins, has proven it knows how to put teams away quickly, with an average margin of 45-9 this year. But the Region 3 champions also know how to win close games, with the proof in their overtime victory against Trousdale on Oct. 5 and last week’s double-overtime win against South Pittsburg, a game the Tigers never led in regulation.

Whitwell, which twice rallied from two scores down against South Pittsburg, held the Pirates to an average of just 1.5 yards per play in the second half.

“We want it more than anybody,” Whitwell senior Hudson Petty said after last week’s win.

Petty, a Mr. Football semifinali­st, was clutch when his team needed him most, throwing for a fourth-down touchdown on the final play of the first half, then adding the 2-point conversion before scoring both touchdowns and a 2-point conversion in the extra periods.

“We play for each other,” Petty said of the Tigers, “and refuse to stop fighting and finding a way.”

The Meigs-Trousdale winner will play the winner of tonight’s other semifinal between Waverly (10-3) and Peabody (121) in the 2A BlueCross Bowl at noon Eastern next Thursday at Tennessee Tech in Cookeville. The Whitwell-Greenback winner will play the winner between Cornersvil­le (130) and Lake County (12-1) for the 1A championsh­ip at noon Eastern on Saturday, Dec. 1, also at Tennessee Tech.

Contact Stephen Hargis at shargis@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6293. Follow him on Twitter @ StephenHar­gis.

 ??  ??
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? Meigs County’s Will Meadows (34) breaks a tackle by South Greene’s Presley Gilliam during a TSSAA Class 2A state quarterfin­al last week at Meigs County. The Tigers won 42-13 and will host Trousdale County tonight in a semifinal.
STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND Meigs County’s Will Meadows (34) breaks a tackle by South Greene’s Presley Gilliam during a TSSAA Class 2A state quarterfin­al last week at Meigs County. The Tigers won 42-13 and will host Trousdale County tonight in a semifinal.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD ??
STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD ?? Meigs County football coach Jason Fitzgerald’s team must travel for tonight’s Class 2A semifinal against Trousdale County after hosting in the first three rounds of the state playoffs, but he believes the experience will be a good one.
STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD Meigs County football coach Jason Fitzgerald’s team must travel for tonight’s Class 2A semifinal against Trousdale County after hosting in the first three rounds of the state playoffs, but he believes the experience will be a good one.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States