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Sports
Wednesday, 19 September 2012 12:54

OHSvPalmBay03_091412

News Gazette Photos/Andrew Sullivan Osceola’s Santiago Hoffman holds on for the game-winning catch over Palm Bay’s Sekai Lindsey in the fourth quarter of Friday’s game at Kowboys field.

Kowboys score TD in 4th quarter to stop Pirates, 14-7

By Rick Pedone

Sports Editor

The Kowboys were on a mission last week: they wanted respect.

They earned it with an exciting, hard-fought 14-7 win against Palm Bay at Kowboys field in front of more than 2,000 fans and a Bright House Networks TV audience.

 

Quarterback Daequan Harrison flipped a 5-yard scoring toss to tight end Santiago Hoffman to cap a 75-yard drive with 2:53 to play for the winning points.

“When we had the ball at the 50 and there were like seven minutes left, I told the offense, ‘This is the stuff you’ll be talking about all your life, driving in the last few minutes to beat Palm Bay,” OHS Coach Doug Nichols said. “I told them, ‘This is where champions are made.’ I thought we played as bad as we could at times, but when it was on the line, we took it.’”

Harrison, who threw only five passes in the game and completed two for 14 yards, both on the game-winning drive, said his instructions from the coaches after a timeout on a third-and-3 play from the Palm Bay 5 was to be careful with the ball.

“Coach told me that unless he (Hoffman) was five yards behind the guy, don’t throw it,” Harrison said.

He put the throw on the money, and the Kowboys, 3-0, earned their biggest regular-season win since a crucial district victory at Lakeland Jenkins two years ago that put OHS in the playoffs.

The win popped OHS up one spot, to No. 8, in the Class 7A state poll.

The winning touchdown drive followed a big play by Kowboys defensive back Brandon Baker, who knocked a potential TD catch from the grasp of Palm Bay receiver Derylton Hill. Hill scored Palm Bay’s only touchdown on a 64-yard fumble return in the second quarter, but Baker, a senior, turned the tables when he knocked the ball from Hill just as he was about to cross the goal line.

“That was my assignment. I saw that the tight end was on top. We were in a special defense where I was playing safety, and that was my man,” he said.

Osceola defensive coordinator Scott Spencer said Baker’s play was one of many good ones from his defense.

“I don’t think I’ve ever had a bunch play so well so long,” Spencer said. “They just kept at it, all night. They’d still be going if they had to. I’m so proud of them.”

The Kowboys defense limited Palm Bay, 1-2, to 125 total yards, just 55 in the second half, and zero points.

The Osceola offense, despite losing three turnovers and having a long TD run called back by a penalty, seemed to gain strength in the fourth quarter.

The Kowboys had 149 yards in the second half and 100 of those came in the fourth period as Stafon McCray (22-121, 1 TD), Davante Small (14-67) and Scooter Fagan (4-31) rotated carries behind the offensive line of Carlos Maxwell, Malik Howard, Kevin Mendez, Tyler Evans and Josh Phelps that was dominating during the winning drive.

“Coach told us when we were at the 50 that we had to play like we wanted to be champions,” Mendez, a 225-pound junior tackle said

OHS drove 65 yards to take the lead in the second quarter. McCray, whose 31-yard run to the Palm Bay 22 was the big play, capped the drive with a 1-yard run. Cristano Nogueras added the PAT to make it 7-0.

The Kowboys were at the Pirates 34 on their next possession with a chance to expand the lead before Hill stripped a Kowboys ball carrier and stunned the large OHS crowd with his TD return to tie the score.

Kowboys defensive back Hassan Childs kept the Pirates out of the end zone late in the first half when he picked off quarterback Brian Fallace (5-16-67-1) at the goal line.

The Kowboys outgained Palm Bay, 259-125.

“It was a physical game, but that’s the kind of game we like to play,” Brandon Baker said. “That’s what we wanted to do, to let people know about how the Kowboys play football.”

Mendez said the Kowboys weren’t happy to learn that they were underdogs to Palm Bay before the game.

“I feel like we made a statement that the Kowboys are back, and that we’re going back to the Citrus Bowl to the state championship,” he said.

Coach Nichols isn’t ready to say that, but he was pleased to see OHS end a long losing streak to Palm Bay.

“My dad said to me the other day, ‘Are you going to beat them this time? You haven’t as long as you’ve been there,’” Nichols, who was an assistant at OHS for 16 years before becoming the head coach two years ago, said. “I had never thought about it before, but I never had won this game, so it feels good.”

Palm Bay has won two state championships and made 17 straight playoff appearances, so not many teams can make a living by beating the Pirates.

“We lost to this team last year, and we didn’t want that again,” Daequan Harrison said. “We’re real close to being where we want to be.”

OHS goes to 0-3 Celebration, a 52-0 loser to Lake Minneola, Friday at 7 p.m.

Celebration Coach Ed Meierkort was unhappy about his team’s regression after it nearly beat Poinciana.

“I don’t mind losing games against superior talent. I do mind taking a step back,” Meierkort said. “We played with very little toughness. It should have been a 24-7 or 28-10 type of game. We had chances.”

Meierkort said his team would again be overmatched physically against OHS.

“I’ve been on both sides of this. In a way, I’m sure they’d probably rather be doing other things than coming here, but that’s the situation we’re in,” Meierkort said. “We’re in the belly of the beast.”

 

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