Lake County Record-Bee

Titles on the line in Week 11

M'town at St. Helena, Upper Lake at South Fork in the spotlight

- By Brian Sumpter bsumpter@record-bee.com

LAKE COUNTY >> If it seems like a bumpy ride, you’d be right. Then again, the bumpy ride of the 2021 high school football regular season certainly beats the COVIDclobb­ered 2020 season that never took place.

It’s all how you look at it.

With Week 11, which is the final week of regular-season play, knocking at the door, that means the end of the road for Kelseyvill­e (1-8) and Lower Lake (0-6), who fittingly enough meet Friday night in Lower Lake hoping to salvage something out of a pretty rough 2021 campaign. In other games involving Lake County teams, all taking place under the lights Friday, all three have title implicatio­ns of one sort or another.

In the North Central League II, Upper Lake (3-0 league, 5-2 overall) travels to Miranda to take on South Fork (3-0, 4-3) in a winner-take-all battle for the league championsh­ip. It’s a rematch of a non-league game won 16-0 by Upper Lake two weeks ago in Upper Lake.

In the NCL I, Middletown (51, 6-3) travels to St. Helena (50, 7-1) looking to secure a share of the league title with an upset win, and just getting to this game has been anything but routine for the Mustangs this week. If the host Saints prevail, they are the undisputed league champions.

Clear Lake (4-1, 6-2) is home against Cloverdale (2-3, 4-4) and will certainly be rooting for Middletown because it’s the only way the Cardinals can snag a share of the title just as long as they also beat the Eagles.

Win or lose, Upper Lake, Middletown and Clear Lake are all headed for the postseason — the Cougars to the new North Coast Section eight-man football playoffs, Middletown to the Division 6 playoffs, and Clear Lake to the Division 7 playoffs, all with maximum brackets of eight teams.

Of the four Lake County teams that play in the NCL I, Kelseyvill­e, Lower Lake and Middletown all compete in Division 6 along with Fort Bragg while Clear Lake is in Division 7 along with Cloverdale, St. Helena and Willits.

Middletown at St. Helena

Earlier in the week the Mustangs faced the unsavory prospect of playing St. Helena minus a half-dozen starters. A private Halloween party attended by several Middletown players turned out to be plenty frightenin­g when a girl in attendance tested positive for COVID-19, according to head coach Bill Foltmer.

As a precaution, those players who were there were held out of practice Tuesday until it could be confirmed whether or not they were exposed to the girl in question. As of Wednesday morning,

Foltmer said he felt confident he would have most if not all of those players against the Saints.

“We lost a day of practice, but it looks like we’ll have them for Friday,” Foltmer said. “I’ll pull up JVs if I have to and play this game because it’s St. Helena’s homecoming and senior night and there’s no way I’m going to let them down. Kelseyvill­e did the same thing for us.”

As previously undefeated Clear Lake found out last week in a 40-14 loss to the Saints in St. Helena, turnovers can’t happen.

“If we’re going to have any chance, we can’t have turnovers,” Foltmer said. “Clear Lake gave them two scores right off the bat because of fumbles.”

Foltmer said the Saints’ standout running back, senior Ivan Robledo, gets most of the attention when the topic is St. Helena’s running game, but he isn’t a one-man show.

“People forget about the other kid they have (senior Harrison Ronayne), and he had more rushing yards against Clear Lake than Robledo,” Foltmer said. “They run the run-option game real well. You bite on the dive and their quarterbac­k (Spencer Printz) is out and around the corner for big yards before you know it.”

And St. Helena’s running game starts with a physical offensive line, one that gets off the ball faster than any other team the Mustangs have faced, according to Foltmer. “We have our hands full,” Foltmer said. “St. Helena is a talented and well-coached team and that’s the reason they’re in first place and undefeated (in league).”

While St. Helena’s offense always comes up first when Saints football is discussed, both Foltmer and Clear Lake head coach Mark Cory said the St. Helena defense is as good or better, and one big reason is the play of Robledo at middle linebacker.

“Defensivel­y he is even better as a middle linebacker,” Foltmer said. “He’s a load to block.”

“He’s one of the best middle linebacker­s I’ve seen in a long, long time,” Cory added. “He’s just so quick and reads as well as anybody I’ve seen in a long time. He’s a fantastic football player. I think he has a future as a safety in college at a decent level.”

According to Foltmer, the bottom line for the Mustangs, who dropped a 26-18 decision to Clear Lake earlier this season in Lakeport, is that they have a chance to come away with some share of the NCL I title if they beat the Saints.

“Our goal at the start of the season was to play for a championsh­ip and now here we are going into our last league game with a chance to do that, so yeah, we’re happy about that,” Foltmer said.

Cloverdale at Clear Lake

Looking to regroup from last week’s loss to St. Helena, the Clear Lake Cardinals will have to do so without one of their top defensive players, nose guard Ty Harmon, who is out with a lower leg injury.

“We’re hoping to have him back for the first round of the playoffs,” Cory said. “He’s been a very strong player for us. He plays with his hair on fire and has been a huge part of our defense, someone we will really miss, for his energy alone.”

Harmon also starts on Clear Lake’s offensive line.

Outside of Harmon, the Cardinals figure to be at full strength for a Cloverdale team coming off a 41-21 nonleague loss to Montgomery High School of Santa Rosa last week after Lower Lake canceled its league game with the Eagles because of a COVID-19 quarantine.

“They’re a good team with good speed,” Cory said of the Eagles. “We have to kind of regroup. A lot of what happened last week (in St. Helena) had to do with St. Helena, but a lot of it had to do with ourselves.”

Multiple early turnovers by the Cardinals allowed St. Helena to outscore them 20-0 in the first quarter.

“We need to get back to playing football the way we’ve been playing football,” said Cory, who added that winning the turnover battle against opponents (even in a non-league loss to Pierce) has been part of the Cardinals’ winning formula this season.

Upper Lake at South Fork

“They all know what’s at stake,” Upper Lake head coach Vince Moran said of Upper Lake’s players going into the Cougars’ second meeting this season with the South Fork Cubs, a game that will decide the NCL II champion and likely give the winner a better seed for the upcoming playoffs.

“If we get it (the win and league title), we’ll be set up pretty nicely for the playoffs,” Moran said.

Since it’s the second meeting between the two teams, Moran said it’s quite likely both schools will run plays they didn’t reveal two weeks ago in Upper Lake.

“We didn’t want to throw anything at them if we didn’t need to, so we kept it pretty basic,” Moran said.

Upper Lake hasn’t been in the position of playing for a league pennant in many years and Moran said his players have been “focused” all week in practice.

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