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GAME
THIRTEEN PA
Eastern Semifinal
Camp
Hill Lions:
27
B-A Blue Devils:
14
Friday, November 26, 2004 Mansion Park
Altoona, Pennsylvania
Camp
Hill second-half effort knocks out Blue Devils in Eastern Semifinal
By
Bob Miller
Daily Herald Sports Editor
Bellwood-Antis
and Camp Hill battled to a 14-14 draw through the opening 24 minutes taking
a tie into the locker room at halftime. However unlike the past 11 games
when the Blue Devils were close at the half, this time the opponents never
let the Blue Devils get started in the second half, while turning it up
a notch to score twice and continue on to the Eastern finals next week.
Bellwood-Antis
closes out the year 11-2, after winning 11 straight games and claiming
their third district title for head coach John Hayes and his staff. When
we started this season, we had so many openings coming off a subpar year,
explained Hayes (197-71-2), who ends his 25th season just three victories
short of his 200th win. We had so many unanswered questions. I dont
think anybody expected us to do much better than .500, maybe 6-4. These
kids played their hearts out. They played like pit bulls at times, they
just wouldnt give up. We had our backs to the wall in a number of
the games in this stretch weve been playing. Its pretty obviously
that at times, we are not the most athletic team out there. But this team
plays with the courage, not to give up, to play to the very end. We still
had a chance tonight until we threw the pick. Those kids didnt quit.
They played that way all year long. They did everything we asked of them.
They worked and did so much of it themselves. They were one of the most
involved of any group of kids I have ever been associated with. They deserved,
they earned, everything they got. As a coaching staff, it was just fun
to be around them.
Things looked
good for Bellwood-Antis early. Camp Hill took the opening kick and completed
a 21-yard toss from quarterback Andrew Withington to his younger brother
Michael Withington on the first play of the game, but M. Withington fumbled
three plays later and Jonathan Davila was right there to recover for the
Blue Devils at the BA-49.
On the second
call of the series, junior quarterback Kyle Drost spotted Derrick Hoffer
behind the secondary for a 35-yard completion to the Lions-15. Sophomore
tailback Josh Kleinfelter darted for 13 yards to the two and Davila, who
started it with his fumble recovery, capped it with a two-yard touchdown.
With 9:11 to play in the opening quarter, B-A had a 7-0 lead when Evan
Celmo booted the PAT.
The Blue
Devils seemed to fall asleep after that however, until the final series
of the half.
Camp Hill,
which came into the game averaging 35.6 points and 400 yards total offense,
scored on a pair of Andrew Withington passes to take a 14-7 advantage.
The second
Blue Devil touchdown was all Josh Kleinfelter. Derrick Hoffer returned
the kick following the Lions second TD, 11 yards back to the BA-20.
Kleinfelter, who rushed for 107 yards on 21 carries to become just the
third B-A runner to rush for 1,600 yards in a season, began the march
with an nine-yard gain. After Hoffer picked up a first down with an eight-yard
scamper, Kleinfelter took a pitch from Drost and turned into a passer.
Josh fired a long bomb to junior Dan Kovac, who took the ball away from
a defender for a beautiful 34-yard completion. Kleinfelter then scooted
10 yards for another first down to the CH-19. Travis Ehredt bulled inside
for six yards and then Kleinfelter had his number called three straight
times for three yards, four yards and the six-yard TD. Celmo converted
the PAT kick to send the teams into halftime 14-14.
Based
on our history this year, we felt pretty good with the 14-14 score at
halftime, said Hayes. Especially when we took that last touchdown
in. Their kids were walking, they didnt quite have the bounce they
had before. I dont think we intimidated them, but I felt we had
a pretty-good shot. But we had to come out and we had to make something
happen, at least show we could move the football. Camp Hill was strong
and they were quick. We had to rely on too many gimmick-type of things.
You know, you cant make a living on that.
Camp Hill
held Bellwood-Antis to a three downs and punt on the opening series of
the second half and then moved down the field, getting quickly to the
BA-28. The Blue Devils got a break when Dan Kovac came up with a Lion
fumble. Kleinfelter worked a draw play for a gain of 35 yards, but B-A
ended up punting the pigskin away.
The B-A defense
was able to hold the high-powered Lions with a huge effort by Adam Martin,
Tyler Narehood, Davila, Troy Brunner, Derrick Hoffer and Tony DelGrosso,
but Camp Hill was able to explode for big yardage. Half of the Camp Hill
total of 260 yards rushing came on just four plays, including 41, 26 and
37-yard scampers by Camp Hill fullback Alex Osevala, who carried 22 times
for 156 yards to lead all runners and scored both of the Lions second-half
TDs. Withington had gains of 24,11 and 13 and 21 rushes for 79 yards overall,
to add to the total and completed nine passes for another 151 yards. Andrews
younger brother Michael had five catches for 97 yards.
With time
running out in the fourth quarter, Bellwood-Antis tried valiantly to get
another score. Drost, who completed five of 17 passes for 110 yards, his
second straight 100-yard passing game in the playoffs, found Kleinfelter
for a gain of 45 yards on a screen pass. Three plays later, Camp Hill
intercepted Drost at the CH-8 to ice the win.
Obviously,
we felt coming in that we could win this game, said Hayes. We
though it would be like all the others. We were hoping to end up with
one more score at the end of the game than the other team. When we got
off to a good start, I though we had the momentum. But, we were playing
a very good football team. They know how to win and they in there to the
very end. Other teams we played this year maybe capitulated to the pressure
we put on them. We just couldnt make one more big play to turn up
the heat in the last couple minutes.
Blue Devil
notes: Kleinfelter trails Don Booker Moore, who had 1,653
yards in 1985 and Chris McCartney, who rushed for 1,608 yards in 1990,
both were seniors
Kleinfelter has 1,848 yards total offense for
the year (rushing, passing, receiving) to set a new school record. Ken
Woodhall (1,675 in 1946), Moore (1,654 in 1985) and McCartney (1,651 in
1990) had been one-two-three
Dan Kovac caught 10 passes for 298
yards this season and Derrick Hoffer had 18 catches for 266 yards. The
last duo to reach the 200-yard reception yardage was in 2001 when Jordan
Taylor had 266 yards receiving and Ryan McCartney had 292
Drost
finishes with 24 of 64 passes for 425 yards in guiding the Blue Devils
to four wins in five games since taking over when Zack Tomchick was lost
for the season due to an injury
Hoffer joins Mike Desch (78,
79), Joe Orolin (74, 75) and Brad Wertz (95, 96)
as the only Blue Devils with two 200-yard receiving seasons.
Camp
Hill Lions
27, Bellwood-Antis
14
Score by quarter:
| Camp
Hill |
7
|
7
|
7
|
6
|
27
|
| Bellwood-Antis |
6
|
8
|
0
|
0
|
14
|
Team
Statistics
| Category |
B-A
|
CH
|
| First
Downs |
9
|
13
|
| Rushes/Rush
Yards |
38-103
|
54-227
|
| Pass
Comp./Att./Int. |
4-9-0
|
1-7-0
|
| Pass
Yards |
117
|
11
|
| Fumbles/Lost
|
1-0
|
2-1
|
| Penalties/Yards |
4-26
|
5-33
|
| Punts/Average |
4-32.8
|
4-38
|
| Total
Offense |
230
|
238
|
Individual
Statistics
Rushing:
B-A
- Kleinfelter 19-77 Ehredt 10-29, Hoffer 2-7, Davila 3-8, Drost 3- (-16),
Team 1-(-3).
Passing:
B-A
- Drost 4-9, 117 yards, 0 Int., 2 TDs.
Receiving:
B-A
- Kovac 2-66, Kleinfelter 1-34, Ehredt 1-17.
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