Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Robinson, Royals do what needed to be done in win

- By Todd Orodenker For MediaNews Group

UPPER DARBY >> Lower Merion made sure it was using as much time as possible on the 40-second play clock. The Aces were not killing time late in the fourth quarter. This was the beginning of the first quarter.

As a result, Upper Darby did not need to do much to earn a 4820 victory Friday night over the Aces. Winless and with about 20 dressed players, Lower Merion was simply trying to shorten the game and survive without incident. More or less, that’s what happened. The Royals, now 4-5 overall and 4-3 in the Central League, controlled a contest they were invited to control.

They led 21-0 after the first quarter and 28-0 at halftime. The running clock started early in the third quarter. Backups and junior varsity players got work in during the fourth quarter.

“When the varsity was in there and the first group was in there, they did what they needed to do,” Upper Darby coach Rich Gentile said. “They lined up correctly, they attacked correctly, they attacked the line of scrimmage. That’s all I ask when you get into a situation playing a team like that because of their injuries and everything else.”

The Aces (0-9, 0-8), beset by injury, attempted three forward passes and used a host of JV callups. The Royals responded accordingl­y, scoring on their first four possession­s.

Max Avoutsou (an eight-yard run and a 31-yard pass from Corey Robinson), Kareem McAdams (one-yard run) and James Tuayamie (22-yard pass from Robinson) found the end zone during the first half.

McAdams, this time from 14 yards out, set off the running clock to open the second half. Dyimer Bradham and Darian Moore had scoring runs after that. The Royals rushed for 326 yards and had

456 in all. Robinson played a big role in that.

The senior began the year as a wide receiver, but when starter Kevin Kerwood got hurt, he stepped in under center. Robinson had been taking second-team reps at quarterbac­k during practice, plus he played there last year on JV.

“Fast progress,” he said after his fifth game, “but I adjusted well.”

The soft-spoken speedster has gotten more comfortabl­e over the past few weeks. He nearly led the Royals to a stunning upset of mighty Garnet Valley last week, but they fell one play short. Bounce-back wins, even under circumstan­ces such as these, are appreciate­d.

“We looked over our film,” Robinson explained. “We’ve seen our mistakes, we learned from it.”

Upper Darby entered this game in 21st place in the District 1 Class

6A power rankings. Sixteen teams make the postseason tournament. Yes, help is needed. The Royals received some Friday, but it likely will not be enough, regardless.

So, they will look to close strong. The Royals got this win, will take on a rival in Springfiel­d next week, then can prepare for the annual ritual with Haverford on Thanksgivi­ng morning. Because of the opponents, there will not be a dropoff, even with the playoffs seemingly unattainab­le.

“I think to end with these two games is really good for us because I think the kids are focused on Springfiel­d just because of the rivalry we do have with them,” Gentile said. “A lot of these kids who played in youth football have played against the kids from Springfiel­d since they were eight. So it’s a big game for them.”

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