Miami Herald (Sunday)

St. Thomas uses takeaways to thwart Western

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com — FRANCO PANIZO

At some point, maybe

St. Thomas Aquinas will stop piling up the takeaways and an opponent will figure out how to crack the Raiders’ defense.

Or maybe not. St. Thomas Aquinas swears the forced fumbles and intercepti­ons — five more of them in its 31-21 win against Western on Friday in Fort Lauderdale — are something it can rely on to create and, so far, the Raiders have mostly proven to be right.

“I think that’s what we average is like five takeaways,” St. Thomas Aquinas defensive lineman Jason Hammond said with a laugh, “but that’s what we harp on.”

The Raiders’ 10-point win wasn’t quite as close as the score indicated, but it also wasn’t quite a lopsided beatdown as the score indicated when they led 31-7 in the final two minutes. The Wildcats picked up multiple first downs on each of their first three possession­s, only to have a pair of turnovers kill two of the drives. With less than two minutes left in the second quarter, Western forced St. Thomas Aquinas into a three-and-out, only to muff a punt and let the Raiders, who are ranked No. 17 in the nation by MaxPreps, score a touchdown with 25 seconds left in the half to go up 17-7 at the break.

St. Thomas Aquinas’ five-takeaway performanc­e came just two weeks after the Raiders had five against Plantation American Heritage to win the meeting between nationally ranked teams.

St. Thomas Aquinas (4-1) eventually put away the Wildcats (2-2) by scoring on back-to-back drives to take a 31-7 lead in the third quarter, then forcing a turnover on downs early in the fourth at Brian Piccolo Stadium.

“We’re not happy with how it transpired,” Raiders coach Roger Harriott siad, “but we’re grateful for the win and that everybody’s healthy.”

On its first drive, Western marched all the way from its own 20-yard line out to St. Thomas Aquinas’ 36 and then fumbled. On their second, the Wildcats started at their 20 again and got out to their 47 before fumbling.

After the first takeaway, star quarterbac­k Zion Turner scored on a 2-yard sneak to give the Raiders a 7-0 lead. After the second, St. Thomas Aquinas made a chip-shot field goal to go up 10-0.

Western finally answered by piecing together a complete drive and Wildcats quarterbac­k Collin Hurst hit star wide receiver Jullian Lewis for an 8-yard touchdown on a slant. Western even followed it up by forcing a turnover on downs, but the Wildcats threw an intercepti­on on a double pass on their first play of the next drive, then muffed a punt after they forced the Raiders into a three-and-out.

With 25 seconds left in the half, Turner threw a fade to Camden Brown and the star wide receiver, who’s orally committed to Pittsburgh, made a diving catch for a 25-yard touchdown.

“Cam just keeps on improving,” Harriott said. “He’s a great player, he has a great spirit.”

Turner started off just 3 of 8 for 99 yards and all three completion­s went to Brown, with a pair of spectacula­r catches. The senior finished 4 of 9 for 111 yards and ran for a pair of touchdowns on sneaks before he sat out most of the fourth quarter with the game in control.

Star running back Anthony Hankerson also ran for 93 yards and a touchdown on 16 carries.

Western added a pair of touchdowns in garbage time, both on throws by Hurst, who finished 26 of 34 for 277 yards and ran for 26 on five carries. Lewis led all receivers with nine catches for 124 yards and two touchdowns.

A Palmetto 7, Columbus 3: Palmetto had to survive a last-second scare, but it did just enough to hold off Columbus in a defensive battle that had one of the wildest finishes that you might see this year.

The Panthers edged the Explorers in a tight tussle at

Tropical Park that came down to an officiatin­g call on the final play.

Columbus quarterbac­k Fernando Mendoza threw an intercepti­on in the end zone in the dying seconds before the ball was dropped near the goal line during Palmetto’s celebratio­ns. The Explorers (1-3) picked up the loose ball, prompting touchdown shouts and scenes of ecstasy between Columbus and its fans.

After some heated conversati­ons and deliberati­on, though, the referees signaled that the final play had been whistled dead after the Panthers’ pick, giving the Panthers (3-1) the win in Miami.

“The time went out and the referee blew it dead and then all of a sudden they jumped on the ball,” Palmetto coach Mike Manasco said. “I am always worried when the game is not in my hands.”

Palmetto’s stingy defense led the way throughout the rowdy affair by making three intercepti­ons, including two in the end zone during the final two minutes.

The lone touchdown came late in the second quarter, with Jai-ayviauynn Celestine taking a direct snap before racing in from 2 yards out with 1:27 left to play in the half.

Columbus responded immediatel­y, making it 7-3 with a 27-yard field goal by kicker Luis Palenzuela with one second left before halftime.

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 ?? MICHAEL LAUGHLIN Sun Sentinel ?? St. Thomas Aquinas running back Anthony Hankerson escapes past Western defenders in the Raiders’ win on Friday night in Fort Lauderdale.
MICHAEL LAUGHLIN Sun Sentinel St. Thomas Aquinas running back Anthony Hankerson escapes past Western defenders in the Raiders’ win on Friday night in Fort Lauderdale.

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