Miami Herald (Sunday)

Turner leads St. Thomas Aquinas to rout in semis

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com

The standard is high at St. Thomas Aquinas, so the Raiders’ celebratio­n after their 45-7 rout of Gainesvill­e Buchholz in the Class 7A semifinals Friday was relatively subdued.

The seniors posed for a photograph on the giant “A” at midfield at Brian Piccolo Stadium, then Zion Turner was on to thinking about the title game. A chance for a three-peat — only the second in St. Thomas Aquinas history — is in play and Turner is ready to try to make history as the starting quarterbac­k for all three.

“This game’s in the past,” the star senior said. “We’re focused on whoever we’ll play in the state championsh­ip.”

The Raiders (13-1) will take their shot at history in Fort Lauderdale, too. St. Thomas Aquinas will face Tampa Bay Tech on Dec. 17 at DRV PNK Stadium with a chance to add a record 13th state title.

On Friday, the Raiders made the path there look easy. After picking up just one first down on its first two drives, St. Thomas Aquinas scored on five straight possession to end the first half and put a running clock on Buchholz (12-2) in the 7A semifinals.

Turner went 12 of 13 for 206 yards and two touchdowns, and ran for 58 yards and another score on five carries, while star running back Anthony Hankerson ran for two more touchdowns to clinch a third straight trip to the 7A championsh­ip game.

“Once we figured out what they were trying to do with us,” Turner said, “we stuck with our game plan.”

Buchholz came down to South Florida as one of the last obstacles between the Raiders and another championsh­ip. The Bobcats are an impressive upstart, with a nine-game winning streak, a wide receiver committed to the UCF Knights, and a quarterbac­k with scholarshi­p offers from Florida and Wake Forest.

St. Thomas Aquinas, though, is its own kind of beast. The Raiders’ 12 Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n state titles are the most in history and their roster features at least a dozen — and probably close to two — future Division I players. They came in as the No. 13 team in the nation, according to MaxPreps, and their only loss came to Tampa Jesuit, another top-15 team, in Week 2.

“It hurt,” Hankerson said of the loss, “but it woke us up.”

For about 10 minutes, Buchholz hung with St. Thomas Aquinas. The Raiders picked up one first down on their first drive and then punted, then they went three-and-out on their next possession. The Bobcats started their drive with a first down, but it was all they managed before punting.

St. Thomas Aquinas took over at its own 42yard line, gave the ball to running back Xavier Terrell for a 30-yard gain on the first play of the drive and was in the end zone two plays later when Hankerson raced down the sideline for a 26-yard touchdown and a 7-0 lead with 2:30 left.

For the rest of the half, Buchholz gained only 28 yards and not a single first down. The Raiders went on a 42-7 run across the next 14:12 with a kickreturn touchdown by the Bobcats as the only hiccup.

St. Thomas Aquinas forced a three-and-out after Hankerson’s first touchdown and Turner launched a 50-yard touchdown to wide receiver Jaylan Sanchez on the first play of the next drive to push the lead to 14-0 with 42 seconds left in the first quarter. After another three-and-out, the Raiders went 60 yards in seven plays and Turner threw another touchdown to star wide receiver Isaiah Hardge to make it 21-0 with 6:56 left in the half.

Now history is within reach, and St. Thomas Aquinas is happy to go for it close to home.

David Wilson: 305-376-3406, @DBWilson2

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