Miami Herald (Sunday)

Inniss excels on offense, defense to lead Patriots

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com

Brandon Inniss waited until deep into the second quarter Saturday to make his first catch and when he did, he turned to his own bench, flexed and called for “me.”

“Give me the [expletive] ball,” he barked.

By the end of Plantation American Heritage’s 21-2 win against Cardinal Gibbons, no one could keep it from him.

The five-star wide receiver finished his afternoon in Fort Lauderdale with seven catches for 81 yards and a touchdown, and also grabbed an intercepti­on by the goal line to preserve his defense’s shutout of the Chiefs at Cardinal Gibbons High School’s Dr. Bud Tight Field.

In a meeting of two teams ranked nationally in the top 25 by MaxPreps, No. 13 American Heritage triumphed with star power to seize control of District 12-2M on the first day of October.

“My assistant coaches do an unbelievab­le job of getting these guys ready, but, at the end of the day, dudes have got to be dudes,” Patriots coach Mike Smith said. “Inniss is, in my opinion, the best player in the country.”

Inniss, who’s South Florida’s No. 1 player in the 247Sports composite rankings for the Class of 2023, and four-star running back Mark Fletcher helped American Heritage flip the field late in the second quarter after the Patriots spent most of the half playing in their own territory, and star quarterbac­k Blake Murphy put American Heritage up 7-2 on a sneak with 37.4 seconds left in the half.

It was all the cushion the Patriots needed. Even though the No. 25 Chiefs ran 29 plays in opposing territory in the first half, all they got out of it was two points on a safety, immediatel­y after American

Heritage (5-1) stuffed them on fourth down at the 1-yard line.

In all, Cardinal Gibbons (5-1) made six trips inside the Patriots’ 40, including four straight to start the game, and didn’t score on any of them.

“We were in a tough situation the whole first half and they came away with two points,” Smith said. That’s a hell of a job by our defense. They just didn’t break and they just kept coming.”

One of those first-half drives ended with a fumble at the 16 and another with an intercepti­on by star cornerback Shamar McNeil, who’s orally committed to the Missouri Tigers, and it let American Heritage go into halftime up 7-2 despite a 35-18 play disparity.

By halftime, the Patriots were back to their identity, with Fletcher past 50 yards, and the star senior kept pounding.

Fletcher, who’s orally committed to the Ohio

State Buckeyes along with Inniss, broke off a 25-yard run — his longest of the game — on American Heritage’s second drive of the second half and Murphy hit Inniss for a 14-yard touchdown and 14-2 lead on the next play.

Fletcher finished with 19 carries for 125 yards and a fourth-quarter touchdown, and Murphy, who’s orally committed to the Louisiana-Monroe Warhawks, made sure the passing game did enough to complement him by going 10 of 16 for 123 yards with no intercepti­ons.

“He always just says, ‘Keep coming,’ and that’s what we do,” Fletcher said. “We just played Patriot football in the second half.”

The killing blow, however, came on defense from one of the best offensive players in the country.

Inniss’ foray into the secondary is a new developmen­t at American Heritage. He did it for his first two years of high school at

NSU University and TRU Prep Academy, but abandoned it to focus strictly on receiver in Plantation — until last week.

The Patriots were playing No. 6 ChaminadeM­adonna last weekend and Inniss knew how loaded the Lions’ group of receivers is, so he asked if he could get in a little bit on defense. His coaches drew up a game plan and Inniss forced a fumble in his defensive debut.

In Game 2, he did even more.

 ?? ANDREW ULOZA FOR THE MIAMI HERALD ?? American Heritage running back Mark Fletcher rushes against Cardinal Gibbons in Saturday’s victory. Fletcher finished with 19 carries for 125 yards and a touchdown.
ANDREW ULOZA FOR THE MIAMI HERALD American Heritage running back Mark Fletcher rushes against Cardinal Gibbons in Saturday’s victory. Fletcher finished with 19 carries for 125 yards and a touchdown.

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