Pea Ridge Times

Blackhawks rise to No. 11 in state poll Prediction­s

- JOHN MCGEE Sports Writer

Huntsville offense rested on the shoulders of their good tailback Cain. While Cain got his yards, although they were tough ones through a Lincoln defense who sought to slow him, another back (Elzey) gained as many yards as Cain on less carries (9896). Elzey also scored five of the six Eagle touchdowns (the other by Cain) as they bested Lincoln convincing­ly.

Shiloh 36, Gentry 6:

The Pioneers kept the game surprising­ly close, trailing only 15-6 at the half. Both teams couldn’t score in the opening period and Shiloh didn’t break it open until the second half, outscoring the Pioneers 21-0. Shiloh’s offensive burst in the second half helped them roll up over 400 yards of total offense by game’s end.

Gravette 35, Berryville 8:

Cedric Duarte ran wild as expected as the Lions demolished the Bobcats easily.

My prediction­s for week No. 8 in Arkansas high school are generally nobrainers. The upper four teams in the 4A-1 will play the bottom four teams, and I think the chasm that exists between the upper and lower halves of the district will only widen.

Prairie Grove 40/ Gentry 7:

The Tigers saw their only chance to still come up with at least a cochampion­ship went by the wayside with the loss to Pea Ridge. After having unblemishe­d 7-0 records the past two seasons, Prairie Grove is now saddled with a 2-2 conference ledger, tied with Gentry and Gravette. I think it will spur them on to a big game against the outmanned Pioneers.

Shiloh 42/Lincoln 14:

Shiloh is an offensive-minded team playing a team with decided defensive shortcomin­gs. The Springdale school will break a lot of big plays, many of which will score. They may already be thinking about the big game with Pea Ridge two weeks hence but it won’t matter in this game.

Gravette 39/Huntsville 14:

The Eagles won’t stop Duarte who will get his yards and touchdowns though the Lions could have a slight problem with Huntsville’s running game. Being a slight problem won’t be enough for Huntsville to turn back the playoff bound Lions.

Pea Ridge 42/Berryville 0:

This could be a danger week with Homecoming distractio­ns and following a very wrenching, hard-fought victory last week over perennial powerhouse Prairie Grove. However, I believe this year’s edition of the ’Hawks are a very discipline­d team of players with plenty of backups available to fill in the gaps if they arise. I believe the ’Hawks will be just too much for the Bobcats, but being high school football, anything could happen. The Bobcats upset the ’Hawks last year in the season finale. play one yard short of the first down, an official decided a new ball was needed and but replaced the ball about 18 inches closer to the first down. Fortunatel­y, the Tiger signal caller got overly excited and moved before the snap, resulting in a flag and 5-yard penalty. However, the ball was marked off only 4 yards from the previous spot, a yard short of the penalty requiremen­ts. Prairie Grove went ahead and punted so it didn’t matter.

Another instance of official blundering occurred when the ’Hawk quarterbac­k was caught 4 yards deep trying to get off a pass. Tiger defenders arrived en mass and pushed him back from the 36 to the 30 resulting in a 10-yard loss, rather than a 4-yard loss by the forward progress rule.

In the third quarter, a ’Hawk running back was brought down after a short gain around right end. On the way to the turf, a Tiger defender grabbed a facemask and another defender kicked the ’Hawk player on the ground a few feet in front of an official who watched the incident and let it go unflagged.

The final peculiarit­y occurred when the Tigers were first and 10 on the ’Hawk 32 with 1:28. The Tigers tried a passing play which was ultimately incomplete but only two seconds ticked off the clock during the play. The officials called time out, but instead of lowering the time left to 1:21 or 1:22, they put more time on the clock than existed before the start of the play. Blackhawk defenders still made the Tigers use up over a minute in getting those final 32 yards to score with 0:26 left.

This past Friday, there was another game in Arkansas where officials ruled that an offensive player’s fumble out of his own end zone wasn’t a safety but a touchback. It should have been a 2-point safety and the other team should have gotten the ball on a free kick, but apparently, there are high school officials that aren’t aware of basic rules.

I like Major League’s Baseball’s new replay technology that teams can use to protest bad calls. Quite a few calls were overturned and MLB used this data to determine what umps will officiate playoff games. The higher scoring umpires got the plum assignment­s instead of the old way which used seniority and standing to line-up their officials crews.

I just hope that the officials we have been seeing lately aren’t the best of the crop.

••• Editor’s note: John McGee is an award-winning columnist and sports writer. He is the art teacher at Pea Ridge elementary schools, coaches elementary track and writes a regular sports column for The Times. He can be contacted through The Times at prtnews@nwaonline.com.

 ??  ?? No. 10 Gage Cawthon, Jr.
No. 14, Dakota Winn, Sr.
No. 17 Austin Losey, Sr.
No. 11 Dakota Russell, Sr.
No. 15 Austin Hicks, Sr.
No. 18 Joseph Ortiz, Soph.
No. 12 Logan Johnson, Soph.
No. 16 Ryan Jackson, Jr.
No. 20 Jake Edwards, Jr.
No. 10 Gage Cawthon, Jr. No. 14, Dakota Winn, Sr. No. 17 Austin Losey, Sr. No. 11 Dakota Russell, Sr. No. 15 Austin Hicks, Sr. No. 18 Joseph Ortiz, Soph. No. 12 Logan Johnson, Soph. No. 16 Ryan Jackson, Jr. No. 20 Jake Edwards, Jr.

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