Sunday, December 26, 2021

Soundtrack of my life: Willie Nelson's coda?


 I’m an old man, and it doesn’t take much these days to make me cry.

This song does it every time. Performed by many artists, it has never been done better than by Willie Nelson and his son, Lukas.
It would serve well as the coda to Willie’s life – or to any one’s for that matter.


“Yes, I understand
That every life must end.

As we sit alone
I know someday we must go.

Oh, I'm a lucky man
To count on both hands
The ones I love.
Some folks just have one.
Yeah, others they got none.

Stay with me.
Let's just breathe.”

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Down and out: Duncanville 35, Southlake Carroll 9

Duncanville proved to one and all who was the better team.
Revenge sought, revenge gained

The Duncanville Panthers’ smash-mouth, take-no-prisoners running back, Malachi Medlock, said last week that his team wanted revenge for the Southlake Carroll Dragons’ defeat of the Panthers in last year’s semifinal round of the 6A Division I playoffs.

And oh brother, they got it. Did they ever.

From the opening kickoff to the final kneel-down, Duncanville left no doubt about who was the best football team, demonstrating its superiority in every single phase of the game.

From the Panthers’ standpoint, I suppose the punishment fit the crime.

 Last season’s 34-27 defeat spoiled the Panthers’ fervent hopes for a return to the state finals for the third year in a row. Carroll unleashed its sophomore running back, Owen Allen, who rushed for more than 200 yards and a couple of touchdowns in guiding the Dragons to the infamous Dodge Bowl in the finals.

If revenge is sweet, then the Panthers are riding on a real sugar high.

Ponder this: In the first quarter, after three possessions, the Dragons had 2 rushing yards and negative passing yards. I didn’t think such a thing was possible.

Final statistics weren’t much better. The Dragons’ total rushing yards for the night were only 28 after you counted yards lost on quarterback sacks.

How bad was it?

Want to know how bad things really were for the beleaguered Dragons? Look no farther than this sequence of events that occurred after the Panthers put the game away with their fourth TD, a keeper by quarterback Solomon James, who accounted for all four of Duncanville’s offensive TDs.

During the very next series, Dragon quarterback Kaden Anderson hefted a 53-yard pass to Landon Samson, who carried it to the Panther 26. That represented, halfway through the 3rd quarter, the first signs of life in the moribund Carroll offense.

A pass interference call against Duncanville pushed the ball to the 11. An Anderson pass to R.J. Maryland in the end zone fell incomplete. Yet another pass interference call by the Panthers moved the ball to the 2.

A Dragon false start, a recurring problem all night, put the ball at the 7. Three plays later, Carroll had traveled no further than the 3, where an Anderson dart toward the end zone was intercepted at the 2 by Panther Kadavion Dotson-Walker.

The Dragon defense managed to hold the Panthers to a 3-and-out, forcing a punt for the first time in the game, but a roughing-the-passer call brought the ball to the 17. On the next play, James threw an 83-yard pass to 15-year-old freshman receiver Dakorien Moore to finish Duncanville’s scoring spree.

James was perfect on13 receptions for 164 yards, passing for 3 TDs and rushing for another.

Too little, too late, on Carroll’s next series, a 38-yard run by James Lehman, set the Dragons up at the Panther 2, from where the sophomore ran in the Dragons’ only touchdown of the night. Added to Tyler White’s earlier 46-yard field goal, it offered a brief and bittersweet uptick of emotion among the Dragon faithful.

But mostly, the thrills and chills were provided by James and his rampaging Panthers. Medlock, who 24 times for143 yards, made a mockery of one of the best defensive units in Southlake Carroll history by tearing through the line like it was a soggy paper sack. He tacked on yards after initial contact, heedless of the Dragons clinging to him like lampreys.

The debacle to come

As for the Duncanville defense, it signaled the debacle to come five plays into the Dragons’ first drive, which drew three procedure calls against Carroll. Then disaster struck. The Panthers’ 5-star senior defensive lineman, Omari Abor, stripped Anderson of the ball, snatched it up and ran 17 yards for a touchdown. He was in Anderson’s face all night.

The Panther D pounced on Allen, who had run roughshod over them last season, eliminating him as a factor in last night’s contest. He rushed for only 69 yards on 15 carries.

The Panther secondary similarly disrupted the Dragon aerial attack. Anderson gained 212 yards in completing 15 of 25 passes. But he and two leading receivers, Samson (3 for 109) and Maryland (3 for 61), largely were rendered irrelevant.

Dragon quarterbacks have been sacked only 19 times this entire season. Duncanville accounted for six of them last night.

Riley Dodge was visibly irritated on the sideline by the procedural errors of his offensive line, which seemed always to occur at the most dreadful moments. He was blunt in his assessment of the takedown.

“We got beat by a good football team,” he told Dragon Radio. “We administered some self-inflicted wounds that are uncharacteristic of us as a team. You can’t do that against a team of that caliber and expect to win. They’re got some dudes over there.”

Thankfully, it’s rare that a Southlake team gets humbled in the manner that occurred last night in McKinney ISD stadium. Interestingly, the last time it happened also was at the hands of the Panthers, who disgraced the Dragons 51-7 in the 2018 playoffs.

Duncanville made it to the finals that year, where it lost a real heart-breaker to the Galena Park North Shore Mustangs when the Mustang quarterback completed a Hail Mary pass to the end zone as the clock expired.

A bad way to lose

It easily was the most thrilling finale to a high school state title game. But I can’t imagine a worst way to lose, can you?

Now, Duncanville, who hasn’t won a state championship since 1998, will have a chance to avenge that defeat – and a second one at the hands of the Mustangs in 2019 – when it meets North Shore next Saturday in the 2021 finals at AT&T Stadium. It should be one hell of a game.

For the Dragons, there will be Christmas shopping and fellowship with family and friends as the sting of last night’s defeat slowly fades.

It shouldn’t be forgotten, in the misery of a painful shellacking, that this team accomplished two of its preseason goals: winning a district championship and playing until after Thanksgiving.

True enough, it did not win the final, and most important, goal – a state title has eluded the Dragons once more. But who said a man’s reach should exceed his grasp, else what’s a heaven for?

There is always next year, and time enough to dream big dreams and pursue important goals. For now, I wish you all the happiest of holidays and a most happy and prosperous New Year.

Go Dragons!

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Soundtrack of my life: You’re so far away

 

A new life in Seattle

If you’re a person of my ancient vintage, any list of Top 10 rock albums of all time would have to include Carole King’s tremendous Tapestry, wouldn’t it?

Released in 1971, it was an instant classic, selling 25 million copies and garnering four Grammys in 1972, including Album of the Year.

It’s almost impossible to choose a favorite song from Tapestry. But when I first heard “So Far Away” as a callow, inexperienced and – dare I say it – innocent 20-year-old, it stood out.

At the time, I considered it a haunting, heartbreaking song about a romantic love lost to time and space, which of course it is.

But if you live long enough, songs like “So Far Away” take on different meanings. Life teaches us that love takes on many forms as we grow older and as our losses become more complex.

As I listened to the song tonight, sitting on my patio watching airliners make their approach to DFW Airport across the western sky, I thought immediately of my son, who recently moved to Seattle to begin a new life there with his girlfriend.

 I know it was the right decision for him to make, and I’m joyful in his happiness. But, God, I do miss him so.

How do I live without the ones I love?
Time still turns the pages of the book its burned.
Place and time always on my mind,
And the light you left remains, but it's so hard to stay
When I have so much to say and you're so far away.

Carole King - So Far Away (Official Audio) - YouTube




Sunday, December 5, 2021

One step closer: Southlake Carroll 47, Allen 21

 

Avyonne Jones surges into the end zone after intercepting an errant Allen throw.

Wake-up call

DENTON – First impressions can be misleading. And that was never truer than the one formed in the opening seconds of yesterday’s quarter-finals playoff match between Southlake Carroll and Allen.

On the first play of the game, Allen quarterback Mike Hawkins took the ball from center and plunged through the line on a 75-yard footrace to the end zone while Dragon defenders gaped in astonishment.

Many fans hadn’t even settled into their seats yet. A guy to my right almost spilled his soft drink on both of us as the Allen side of UNT’s Apogee Stadium exploded in joy at Hawkins’ exploit. A mere 13 ticks off the clock and the Carroll Dragons were trailing for the first time in the playoffs.

That harbinger of doom was followed by a quick 3-and-out by the Dragon offense and a punt that set up the Eagles with great field position at their 48.

An uneasy flutter ruffled through the Carroll side of Apogee, and I couldn’t tell whether the sweat beading up on my forehead was caused by the afternoon sun playing hide-and-seek in the clouds or a rising sense of concern, if not yet panic.

Righting the ship

But at that point, Carroll’s defense, which has been winning games and asserting its will on opponents all season, shrugged off its shock and awe and put the brakes on the Eagle express threatening to gather steam and run amok.

The Dragon offense, led by junior quarterback Kaden Anderson and powered by rusher supreme Owen Allen, then proceeded to score 34 unanswered points before the end of the first half.

Allen explained the reaction on the Dragon sideline to the way the game began.

“We weren’t shocked, we stayed level headed and calm and responded,” Allen told the Fort Worth Star Telegram’s Brian Gosset. “And our defense shaped up after that first play and kept them to little or no yards.”

Well, not exactly. But the defense did stage a classic bend-but-don’t-break game plan that allowed Allen to amass 505 total yards of offense (compared to Carroll’s 444) – but only two scores against Dragon starters, both the results of big plays. The Carroll D also blocked a punt and forced two turnovers that translated into points that shifted the momentum of the game.

Its workmanlike performance yesterday prompted radio color analyst Justin Padron to repeat his season-long assertion that this is the best defensive unit ever fielded by Southlake.

“It’s like they come to work with their lunchpails and just get the job done,” he said.

Race to the end zone

After Carroll tied things up with its first TD – an 18-yard Anderson pass to receiver Landon Samson (5 for 54) – the Eagles set up shop on their 25. On the second play of that drive, Dragon corner Avyonne Jones snatched a tipped Hawkins pass and raced 74 yards to the end zone, handing the Dragons a 14-7 lead they would only expand.

Carroll’s fourth TD also came as the result of a defense-influenced Allen miscue. A Hawkins pass was caught, then fumbled near midfield. Dragon defensive back Logan Anderson fell on it, setting up a methodical, time-eating march downfield.

As a historical sidenote, for the first time all season, kicker Tyler White failed to make the extra-point kick on that score and the following one. Radio commentators speculated it was because his regular holder – stalwart defensive back Josh Spaeth – was nursing a sore hand on the sideline.

Owen Allen, who finished the night with 144 yards on 30 carries, scored a trio of 2-yard TD dives in the ensuing Dragon onslaught. He left the game late in the fourth to the cheers of the Dragon faithful.

Anderson had a great night, completing 12 of 23 passes for 156 yards and one passing TD. He ran for another, ending a 64-yard drive that began after Allen failed to convert on 4-4, with an 8-yard skip (literally) across the goal line.

His rival, Hawkins, the third sophomore quarterback the Dragons have faced in as many weeks, racked up impressive numbers. He gained 315 yards in the air, completing 20 of 33 attempts. An effective and elusive runner, he rushed for another 142 yards and the Eagles’ last trash-time TD.

Both of Allen’s first-half scores came as a result of big plays by Hawkins. By far the most spectacular was his TD dash to open proceedings. Later, in the closing seconds of the half, he sent a 54-yard spiral downfield that brought the Eagles to the edge of the Dragon red zone. Several plays later, Hawkins connected with receiver Jacob Brasher for Allen’s 2nd score.

Numbers that count

But while he looked good on paper, Hawkins failed to translate those numbers into the ones that count – scores to challenge and subdue the rampaging Dragons. His leading receiver, Jordyn Tyson had 6 receptions for 158 yards, but no TDs.

“That’s a proud program, a historic program, and you play anyone late in the season, in this division, they’re going to bring their game,” Allen told the S-T’s Gosset. “They’re a talented program, but like I said, we stayed level headed and kept pushing and pushing.”

Indeed, they did. Carroll coaches kept their starters in the trenches until almost the very end, a recognition of the explosive nature of the Allen offense that the Dragons managed to keep in check for most of the afternoon.

The Dragons’ seventh – and final score – came after the defense stopped Allen from yet another fourth-down conversion. Behind the running of Allen – aided by sophomore James Lehman -- Anderson put together a, 85-yard drive that ate almost 7 minutes off the clock. Lehman ended the series with a 6-yard scamper to the end zone. 

Only then did backups flood the field, which allowed Hawkins to move his team quickly into Carroll’s red zone and dart 4 yards for Allen’s final score. Instead of saving face, it only highlighted the Eagles’ helplessness again the sturdy Dragon best.

Now, it’s on to the semifinal round of the UIL 6A Division I playoffs to face the mighty Duncanville Panthers.

The Panthers dispatched a solid DeSoto squad last night, 38-20, behind the powerful running of RB Malachi Medlock, who rushed for 252 yards and 3 TDs.

That sets up a replay of last year’s semifinal match between the Dragons and Panthers. The Dragons won that one, 34-27, to earn the right for Dragon coach Riley Dodge to face his father, the legendary Todd Dodge, coach of the Austin Westlake Chaparrals, in the famous Dodge Bowl at Cowboys Stadium.

Medlock says his team, which hungers for its first state title since 1998, wants revenge for last year’s defeat. Good luck with that.

Duncanville will be a tough nut to crack, but crackable it is. Carroll’s defense is significantly stronger than last year, a fact Medlock will discover come next Saturday.

A worthy successor

As for the offense, it may lack some of the luster that it did with the inestimable Quinn Ewers at the helm. But junior Kaden Anderson, who stepped in when Ewers skipped his senior year to pursue fame and riches at Ohio State, has worked hard to prove he’s a worthy successor.

Ewers now says he’s leaving Ohio State and is looking for a spot with several Texas schools. I’m not certain what all that means. But it raises certain disquieting questions, doesn’t it?

The important thing for Dragon fans is that thanks to Anderson, his teammates and his coaches, Ewers didn’t leave the Carroll program a smoking ruin by his abrupt departure.

Instead, Carroll’s TD-producing machine is playing in the semifinals for the second year in a row. Radio commentators said yesterday that the Dragons have never lost a semifinal playoff game in the entire history of their storied program. Is that a comfort – or a dare to the disinterested gods of chance to take notice and adjust the scales?

Of course, Riley Dodge and his young charges don’t ponder such cosmic mysteries. For the moment at least, they choose to bask in the glow of well-earned victory and don't worry – yet – about who comes next.

“It will be amazing whoever it is, and we’re fully aware of that,” Dodge told the S-T before his next opponent had been decided. “We’re not really going to think about it too much this evening. We’ll enjoy it, and we’ll get back to work.”

Go Dragons!


Dragon defenders bedeviled Allen runners all afternoon.

Thursday, December 2, 2021

Soundtrack of my life: Deciding NOT to cut my hair


When I left Big Spring for North Texas State University in the late summer of 1971, I was – unlike many (most?) young people of the age of 20 – short-haired and closely shaven.

Because of pressure from my parents, I had delayed my fervent wish to escape the aridness – in so many ways – of Big Spring and West Texas. To keep peace in the family, and to placate my parents, I had kept my hair short and my face clean.

To my generation, long hair was a symbol of revolution, a rejection of the Vietnam War, racism, sexism and the corrupting influence of the business establishment on our political and social order.

It felt like a betrayal every time I looked in the mirror.

But after two years at Howard County Junior College, where I made myself as much of a pain in the ass to the administrators of that institution as I could manage, I finally made my escape.

I immediately grew a mustache and didn’t get a haircut for more than a year. In the safe confines of North Texas, I settled in, becoming – in the scornful words of my father – a long hair in appearance, temperament and action.

 This song, “I Almost Cut My Hair,” was written by David Crosby and was included on Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young’s Déjà Vu album in 1970. Neil Young considered it “David Crosby at his best.” Who can disagree?

Here’s a personal coda. When I came home from North Texas for a visit, my hair brushing my shoulders, my mustache in full bloom, I knew my parents disapproved – but they never mentioned it. And as I was getting in my 1961 Dodge Polaris to return to Denton, my father slipped me two $20 bills, a tidy sum in those by-gone days. 

Make of that what you will.

Almost cut my hair
It happened just the other day, it's gettin' kinda long
I could-a said, "It wasn't in my way"
But I didn't and I wonder why
I feel like letting my freak flag fly

CROSBY STILLS NASH & YOUNG - Almost Cut my Hair (Live 1974) - Bing video