Windham Middle School coach Tony Leslie knows the importance of staying positive when it comes to leading his Eagles, so after the team lost to a tough Sanford squad in the season opener, he made his plans for the rest of the season quite clear.
“I don’t expect to lose again anytime soon,” Leslie said
a little more than 24 hours after the game. Looking back at the varsity and
junior varsity games, he saw enough that he knows the adjustments that he and
fellow coaches Rusty Babb, Mark Wall and Anthony Gugliuzza will make this week
leading into this Saturday’s game at South Portland.
On the offensive side of the ball, new quarterback Blake
Houser continued to impress, connecting on some nice completions with Garrett
Peeples who converted from tailback to wide receiver this season. In the
pocket, Houser showed composure and poise under pressure. A long gain down the
right side of the field to Peeples in the second half set up Windham’s lone
touchdown of the game, which the wide receiver also caught. Houser also
completed passes to tight ends Josh Mora and Noel Redlon with the latter
catching a pass late in the game that put the Eagles inside the Sanford 20-yard
line.
Houser also ran the ball effectively, as did Treva
Valliere and Grant Jacobson, both of whom have no problem running over a
defender to pick up an extra yard or two.
After falling behind to Sanford early in the second
quarter, Windham’s defense played much better in the second half with nose
guard Blake Colby and tackle Braxton Cassidy sealing up the middle of the line,
forcing their opponents to try to run outside where they were stopped by
linebackers Valliere and Jacobson and safeties Houser and Mora.
Leslie admitted that there were more procedural penalties
than he would have liked to have seen, but he stressed the importance of
letting the teammates learn to work together. “You want to give these guys an
opportunity to feel what it’s like and to develop a trust in them,” Leslie
explained.
The coaches also saw plenty of bright spots in the junior
varsity game as well. Quarterback Anthony Gugliuzza ran the offense
efficiently, completing a long pass to Redlon, while tailback Seth Wall ran for
more than 100 yards. Brady Bowen delivered the team’s defensive highlight in
the form of an interception that he ran back. While the scoreboard read 20-0 in
favor of Sanford, the competition was much closer than the score indicated. “He’s
a very smart kid who makes up for size with smarts,” Leslie said of Gugliuzza. “We’ve
got a pretty good line on the JV squad. They fight hard and there’s just a few
things there that we have to correct.”
Leslie already had some personnel changes in mind that he
thinks will put his team in a good position heading into South Portland. “They’ll
see a slightly different team with the personnel changes, if they think they
can exploit what they saw against Sanford, they have another thing coming.” Spoken
like a true optimist.
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