Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Rustin’s revenge tour runs up against hungry AP

- Neil Geoghegan Columnist To contact Neil Geoghegan, email ngeoghegan@21stcentur­ymedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @NeilMGeogh­egan.

SHARON HILL >> “Revenge is a dish best served cold.”

It’s a proverb that has been around for so long, nobody really knows its true origin. It (may) have been published for the first time in

1846, and has subsequent­ly appeared in movies from The Godfather to Star Trek II: The Wrath of Kahn.

The idea of avenging a previous setback is a universal motivation­al tool, especially in sports. It was used to maximum effect by West Chester Rustin in its first two District 1 Class 5A playoff wins. But Friday, host Academy Park was on the other end of the revenge narrative and went on to edge the Golden Knights, 21-20, in the semifinals.

In light of what happened in the district playoffs a year ago, it’s easy to see how and why third-seeded Academy Park was up for the payback it pulled Friday. These two met in the district quarterfin­als in

2018, when Rustin cruised to a

36-point victory.

“We talked a lot about it,” AP senior running back Glister Threadgill said. “That game hurt a lot.”

“We weren’t game-ready last year,” added senior quarterbac­k Barry Brown. “This time we were.”

Sometimes, the idea of revenge is overused and overhyped. And sometimes it evolves into a powerful incentive. The latter was true Friday.

“What happened at the end of last season was mentioned during the week,” Academy Park coach Jason Vosheski

said. “We thought we were better last year against (Rustin) than we played, and they played very well. We knew they were a good football team, so we had to bring everything we had tonight.”

And bringing everything means you tap into any motivation ploy that can potentiall­y get you over the top.

“It was talked about because we were supposed to play (Rustin) at home last year in districts, we ended up losing 42-6 at their place,” Vosheski said, “and we didn’t want to lose to them again to end our season.”

Sometimes, it’s just as simple as that. Academy Park played with more emotion and energy in the first half, and (surprise, surprise) had a 21-14 lead at the break. And somehow, it held up.

“We came out a little slow in the first half,” Rustin coach Mike St. Clair said.

On the receiving end, Rustin had big-time redemption on its mind when it opened the district playoffs with a 23-0 shutout over an Upper Dublin squad that ended Rustin’s 2018 season with a seven-point win in the district final.

And perhaps even more gratifying was a 14-7 quarterfin­al victory over archrival West Chester East a week ago, a rematch of a 20-point regularsea­son setback in mid-October. The earlier loss is what gave the Vikings the outright ChesMont American title.

“This was a tough way to go out, but it was a nine-win season, and that’s what we expect at Rustin,” St. Clair said. “They kept the tradition going.”

As for Academy Park, the Knights (11-2) advance to the district final where top-seeded

Cheltenham awaits. Academy Park is going for the program’s fourth district crown since 2013.

“We come and go in spurts, but (Friday) night we were ready,” Vosheski said. “From what happened at the end of (the 2018) season to where we are now, it tells us that we are going into the right direction. It’s not going to get any easier, I can tell you that.”

On the team’s first offensive play from scrimmage, Brown hit wideout Eric Willis on a flea-flicker that covered 69 yards and set up the first score. Rustin was down 14-0 midway through the second quarter when Nick Madonna scored his first of three TDs, but the momentum lasted all of 15 seconds. That’s because Academy Park senior Malik Johnson ran back the ensuing kickoff 95 yards. The extra point wound up being the game-winning point.

“We had good practices every day this week,” St. Clair said. “Three plays were the difference in the game. They made them, and we didn’t.”

Madonna scored two more times, including an 11-yard scamper late in the third, but the point-after attempt was wide right to make it 21-20.

Rustin had three more possession­s in the final period and went three-and-out on all of them. Academy Park got possession with 4:30 to go and never gave it back thanks to a couple first-down runs by Brown. He threw for 184 yards and ran for 95 of his 108 rushing yards in the second half.

“Our defense has carried us all season,” Vosheksi said. “It’s been our backbone, especially in the playoffs. Our defense was incredible in the fourth quarter. Once it was 21-20, our defense stiffened and didn’t give up anything.”

And that’s saying something against Rustin’s ground-andpound offense that’s been rolling up big numbers for years. Madonna wound up with 122 rushing yards, but the rest of the Golden Knights managed just 100 combined.

“We gave up a bomb for a touchdown, a kickoff return for a touchdown, and we missed an extra point, and we lose the game by one point,” St. Clair lamented. “I thought we played better in the second half and we could have won this game.

“Kudos to (Academy Park).”

 ?? MIKEY REEVES — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Rustin’s Nick Madonna, right, steps past the reach of Academy Park’s Samaad Moultrie for one of his three touchdowns Friday night. The AP defense, though, got the final word on a rematch of last year’s quarterfin­als with a 21-20win over the Golden Knights in the District 1Class 5A finals.
MIKEY REEVES — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Rustin’s Nick Madonna, right, steps past the reach of Academy Park’s Samaad Moultrie for one of his three touchdowns Friday night. The AP defense, though, got the final word on a rematch of last year’s quarterfin­als with a 21-20win over the Golden Knights in the District 1Class 5A finals.
 ??  ??

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