Cupertino Courier

Four takeaways from 47th Wedemeyer Classic

- By Vytas Mazeika Correspond­ent

LOS GATOS >> After a one-year absence because of COVID, the 47th rendition of the Charlie Wedemeyer Santa Clara County all-star high school football game was back on Feb. 5.

It didn’t disappoint. In front of a capacity crowd at Los Gatos High, where Wedemeyer continued to coach for years even after he was diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease) in 1977, a hard-fought battle saw the North prevail over the South 15-14 with 3.1 seconds left.

The South, which still holds a series edge of 2419-4 in the exhibition of graduating Santa Clara County seniors, attempted a 42-yard field goal for the victory, only for the kick to fall excruciati­ngly short.

Both teams stormed the field, and instead of the North being forced to take a knee amid pandemoniu­m during the pandemic, an audible by the referees ended the contest with time still left on the scoreboard.

Here are four takeaways from the game, named in honor of the coach who died in 2010:

Coming full circle

It took three tries to douse North coach Shelley Smith with a water bucket.

The players were determined. Smith, who recently retired as athletic director and head coach at Mountain View after nine years, steps away from the sidelines as a winner.

His connection to the Wedemeyer Classic extends not only to Charlie but his older brother Herman — a halfback at St. Mary’s College in Moraga who was elected into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1979.

After graduating from Saratoga in 1975, Smith played football at St. Mary’s as an offensive lineman.

His coaching career began as an assistant at his alma mater, where he crossed paths with the youngest sibling in the Wedemeyer clan.

“It’s amazing how this all came full circle for me,” Smith said. “Charlie and (his wife) Lucy used to after every game have both teams come over and he would give us words of encouragem­ent. So I started my coaching career with Charlie and it had influence over a lot of stuff that we tried to do — and then we end it here.

“So it’s quite something.”

Right QB for the job

If Smith could entrust anyone to get the job done, it was Mountain View quarterbac­k Jackson Steffen.

His pupil orchestrat­ed touchdown drives on the opening and closing possession­s for the North, thereby securing a proper walk into the sunset — err, moonlight.

“That was a great feeling,” Steffen said. “It was stressful at the end, but I’m glad we got the win for him.”

On the third play from scrimmage, Steffen improvised by stepping up in the pocket and heaved a deep throw to Luther K. Glenn, the Bay Area News Group cooffensiv­e player of the year.

“He was supposed to run a wheel up the sideline and I had to scramble,” Steffen said. “I just saw him cutting across the field and I knew he was fast, so I threw it down to him. He made a play.”

The result was a stunning 66-yard touchdown.

“I was thinking he wasn’t going to throw to me,” Glenn said. “I was looking at him and we made eye contact.”

The North rotated a trio of quarterbac­ks, so Steffen didn’t spend a lot of time on the field. His timely return came during a 10-play, 58-yard drive during which Steffen converted a fourth down on a 1-yard sneak, then scored the winning TD on a designed 11-yard keeper.

“It was a great play-call by coach,” said Steffen, who finished 4-of-6 for 109 yards.

Defense and special teams

The only turnover was an intercepti­on by South defensive back Thomas Di Vittorio of Bellarmine in what turned out to be essentiall­y a punt on third-andlong from midfield.

Besides the TD drives engineered by Steffen, the North only managed 81 yards on its six other possession­s.

But one of the booming punts by Santa Clara senior Dino Beslagic — a sneaky MVP candidate — pinned the South at its own 1-yard line after Camilo Arquette hustled to the bouncing ball.

Two snaps later, Arquette — a St. Francis standout bound for Northern Arizona — split the offensive line to record a safety with 1:31 left in the first half.

“I saw the guard block down and the center, he kind of went the other way,” said Arquette, who also racked up a sack, “so I went, ‘All right, I’m going to fill that gap right now.’ And I got there.”

He added: “Both sides of the ball have got great athletes, so it was a test of toughness.”

Arquette was one of four Lancers on the field, along with San Jose State-bound Denaris Derosa, Michigan commit Nicolas Andrighett­o and outside linebacker Esaia Vavao.

“I’m just happy that we ended with a W,” said Arquette, whose undefeated regular season included a thriller against De La Salle, but concluded with a 16-12 setback to West Catholic Athletic League rival Serra in the Central Coast Section Division I title game. “CCS finals, that was a tough loss, and I’m just happy to finish my high school career with a win.”

Touchdown machine

Both times the South found its way into the red zone, the obvious target was 6-foot-2 wide receiver Kai Matthews out of Santa Teresa.

After falling behind 7-0, quarterbac­k Spencer Gorgulho (Christophe­r) put together an 11-play, 80-yard drive that culminated with a 9-yard fade to Matthews.

On the opening possession of the second half, South QB Anthony Martinez (Andrew Hill) sprinted 52 yards on a read-option. On third down, he flipped an 11-yard fade to Matthews to go up 14-9 less than two minutes after intermissi­on.

“I felt prepared today,” Matthews said. “I even told coach, ‘I’m nervous, but if you’re not nervous, you’re not ready.’ And I was definitely ready today.”

Also

At halftime North running back Jakerion Thurman (Del Mar) earned the “Never Give Up” award. South running back Nate Williams (Live Oak) was honored with the “Dwight Clark” award . ... Mcclymonds coach Michael Peters was named Charlier Wedemeyer Memorial Coach of the Year and NFL Don Shula Coach of the Year.

 ?? PHOTOS BY SHAE HAMMOND — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? North players Jackson Steffen (10) and Quinn Merritt celebrate after a touchdown against the South team in the fourth quarter of the Charlie Wedemeyer Santa Clara County all-star game at Los Gatos High School on Feb. 5. The North won 15-14.
PHOTOS BY SHAE HAMMOND — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER North players Jackson Steffen (10) and Quinn Merritt celebrate after a touchdown against the South team in the fourth quarter of the Charlie Wedemeyer Santa Clara County all-star game at Los Gatos High School on Feb. 5. The North won 15-14.

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