A week after opening the season with a loss, the Windham Middle School varsity football team traveled to South Portland and effectively knocked out its competition, playing as a unit on both sides of the ball in a convincing 28-6 victory.
“A
lot of people stepped up in areas where they needed improvement from last
week,” said head coach Tony Leslie. Blake Houser and Grant Jacobson were moved
to weak side and strong side defensive end, respectively, and they wreaked
havoc on South Portland’s offense. Blake Colby also relocated from nose tackle
to linebacker and Ricky Brichetto took over at starting nose tackle. Houser,
who is also the team’s starting quarterback, had two sacks on defense and a
rushing touchdown and a pass for a score on offense in a well-rounded outing.
After
South Portland took the opening kickoff, Jacobson and linebacker Treva Valliere
caused a fumble that the Eagles recovered deep in their opponents’ territory. Quarterback
Houser connected with a pass to receiver Parker Varney to put Windham in
scoring position.
The
Red Riots got the ball back deep in their own half of the field when Windham
couldn’t punch it in for a touchdown, but then Houser struck, tackling the
South Portland quarterback in the end zone for a safety, putting Windham by a
score of 2-0.
Showing
his versatility, Houser took the ensuing kickoff and made a long run into South
Portland territory. A facemask penalty further hurt the Red Riots, putting
Windham in scoring position. After a Houser run put the Eagles inside the
10-yard line, he punched it in for Windham’s first touchdown. The two-point
conversion put the Eagles up 10-0. Leslie gave credit to assistant coach Rusty
Babb who, in the week leading up to the game, prepared the offensive line of
Jack Alderman, Braxton Cassidy, Colby, Brichetto, Owen Shepard and Logan Douglas.
They gave Houser excellent protection.
As
the Eagles continued to dominate, fullback Jacobson punished the Red Riots as
he plowed through would-be tacklers in a run that put the team inside the
five-yard line. Valliere took a handoff and punched through the line for
another Windham touchdown. The team went into halftime leading 22-0.
In
the third quarter, the Eagles picked up where they left off and for the second
week in a row, Houser connected with receiver Garrett Peeples on a long pass
and then found him in the end zone for Windham’s fourth touchdown of the
afternoon.
Appeasing
the South Portland coach who was complaining that Windham was still playing its
starters with a 28-0 lead, Leslie put seventh graders Anthony Gugliuzza, Seth
Wall and George Butts in at quarterback, tail back and offensive line,
respectively, late in the third quarter. “It’s a very fine line between running
up the score and making sure your guys get good work,” said Leslie. “We weren’t
there yet. I’m never going to be one to back down just because we’re winning.
It’s an opportunity for more work.”
After
South Portland scored a touchdown in the fourth quarter, the Windham starters
were reinserted into the game. With South Portland trying to salvage some
respect, Peeples took it away from the Red Riots when he intercepted a pass to
seal the Eagles win. This week, the Eagles host undefeated Scarborough on
Sunday afternoon at 1 p.m. and Leslie said he already has some more personnel
changes in mind to keep Windham on the winning track.
Captions
Braxton
Cassidy (L) and Blake Colby (#65) sandwich a South Portland defender during Saturday’s
action.
Blake
Houser runs for a big gain in Windham’s convincing Victory.
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