Saturday, September 28, 2024

The cost of success: Southlake Carroll 44, Keller Timber Creek 7

 

Superstar Riley Wormley, shown here with QB Angelo Renda, left last night's game with a left-knee injury.

A big win, yes, but …

What price victory?

It’s a question many Dragonheads may be asking themselves in coming days after Southlake Carroll’s shellacking last night of the Keller Timber Creek Falcons.

The Dragons, led by the brilliant running of superstar Riley Wormley, easily brushed aside the Falcons, who boasted an undefeated record they hardly deserved.

But in doing so, Carroll may have lost the services of the talented Wormley, who had to be helped off the field in the 3rd quarter after a 6-yard run in which he injured his left knee.

Wormley spent a lengthy period in the medical tent and later was carted off the field, his leg encased in a metal brace, to the cheers of the hometown crowd and the hugs of his teammates.

“It doesn’t look good,” head coach Riley Dodge admitted to The Dallas Morning News’ Greg Riddle after the game. “You can tell in the kids’ eyes after a really good win. It deflates you a little bit. Obviously, he’s a special player and a special teammate, a captain and a leader on this team.”

When a coach talks like that to a member of the media, you can bet damned well that the injury is a serious one. Serious enough to put Wormley out for the season? Let’s hope not. But I have a dismal hunch that is exactly what’s going to happen.

End of the show?

If I’m right, that’s the end of the Riley and Davis show. That explosive rushing ensemble – featuring the redoubtable Wormley and his partner in crime, junior Davis Penn – has powered the Dragons past District 4-6A rivals Byron Nelson and Trinity to a 5-0 season record and thrust Carroll high in the playoff conversation.

I know. It’s churlish to consider the impact of Wormley’s injury on the Dragon program. After all, the young man’s bright future – he is a USC commit – is at stake, as is his overall good health. His welfare is paramount.

Still and all, this is high school football, and the bigger picture looms for the Dragons.

They are lucky that the sturdy Penn – an indefatigable, hard-charging runner without Wormley’s flair, but with much of his skill and determination – remains ready for duty.

Dodge, in his comments to the DMN’s Riddle, acknowledged that fact.

“Davis is the guy,” he said. “He carried a lot of the weight last year for us. He’s one of the top running backs in the state. We’re blessed to have two really good running backs.”

Blessed, indeed. But don’t kid yourself. Wormley will be missed. Plenty. He was a glory to see last night, rushing for three touchdowns, including a couple of first-play-from-scrimmage TD runs that made a mockery of the Falcon’s 4-0 season record.

In their first drive of the night, the Falcons drove confidently down the field, with Creek quarterback Carson Porter eating up the clock with a steady diet of short passes before he tossed a 17-yard strike to receiver Xavier Lee.

But the Creek celebration was a short one. Exactly 53 seconds later, Dragon quarterback Angelo Renda sailed an 80-yard beauty to his favorite receiver, junior Brock Boyd, as he raced wide open downfield, no Falcon defender within 20 yards of him.

The score now knotted at 7-7, the Dragons held Creek to a 3-and-out, then swept downfield 63 yards in five plays before Renda hit the sure-handed Boyd with a 45-yard TD arc.

From that point on, it was disaster on the ground for the Falcons, thanks to Wormley and Penn.

Pushing it in

After another 3-and-out, Creek turned the ball over to Carroll, which drove smoothly to the Falcon 2, where Wormley pushed it in.

Porter and his Falcons could do no better on their next possession. After a weak-footed punt that Dragon Luc Jaquemard returned to his 46-yard line, Penn bulldozed to the 4, then scored from the 2.

Creek, now trailing 28-7, started its next drive at its own 13 and could only struggle to its 22 before Porter – under immense pressure all night – was sacked by defensive end Jack Van Dorselaer at the Creek 10 and the Falcon punter lined up in the endzone to boot it away.

The end was never in doubt, but the true impact of the game still is to be determined.


The Falcon punt skittered off the kicker’s foot and bounced out of bounds at the original line of scrimmage. From there, Wormley plunged through the line to paydirt. One play. One Dragon. No fuss, no muss.

For the Falcons, the nightmare continued. After starting their next drive at their 25, Porter was sacked by Van Dorselaer – again – and coughed up the ball to Dragon defensive lineman Austin Davidge.

Two plays later, Renda launched the ball to sophomore receiver Brody Knowles in the end zone. The ball brushed Knowles' fingers, then was juggled by two – or was it three? – Creek defenders before one of them fell to the turf with it clutched in his arms.

But the gift was returned unopened. After another pitiful 3-and-out, the Creek kicker – who shall remain unnamed to protect the inept – sent another punt sliding out of bounds at the 26.

And from there – yes, you guessed it – Wormley muscled through the line, twisting out of two tackles and scored his hat trick.

Hindsight being 20/20, his night should have ended at the half. But Wormley returned for the first Carroll series of the second, which was interrupted by another rare interception of the normally reliable Renda. Two plays later, the Dragon-tormented Porter threw an errant pass of his own, which was snagged by Carroll defender Ethan Fisher.

Wormley’s injury occurred as he fought for yardage to the 25.

With his departure, much of the ooph of the Dragon offense faded away. Renda sailed passes of 51 and 9 yards to Boyd to get Carroll inside the Creek 10. But the drive stalled there, setting up a 28-yard field goal by Gavin Strange that ended scoring for the night and signaled the beginning of substitutions by both squads.

Dragon dominance

A group of statistics illustrates the scope of Dragon dominance. Carroll rushed for 467 total yards, compared to the Falcons’ meager 134. And while the Dragons were gaining 267 yards in the air, Porter could manage only 88. On the ground, the Carroll outran Creek 200 to 46.

Offensive stars, no surprise, were Wormley (8 for 73, 3 TDs) and Penn (8 for 76, 1 TD). Both gained an average of more than 9 yards every time they touched the ball.

Boyd was not far behind, perhaps even a half-step in front. He caught 7 Renda passes for 213 yards and the Dragons’ first two scores.

Renda, despite his two INTs, had an acceptable night. He completed 10 of 18 passes for 233 yards, including the two long ones to Boyd for TDs.

The Dragon D deserves a lot of credit, too. Although the Falcons don’t wield the strongest offensive arsenal around, the Carroll defense tossed Falcons around like ragdolls.

Van Dorselaer was a monster, spending almost as much time in the Creek backfield as Porter. Although he gained his reputation and was recruited by Tennessee as a tight end, he gracefully accepted a transfer to the Carroll defense to help that beleaguered squad.

As such, he quickly established a commanding presence and now leads the team in tackles. He and Davidge bedeviled Porter on every play, disrupting his timing and sending him scrambling for his life. Luke Bussman also was a major factor in shutting down – and then stamping out – the Creek offense.

Dodge heaped praise on his defensive stalwarts.

“Our defense played lights out,” Dodge told the Fort Worth Star Telegram’s Mike Waters. “We gave up the quick score early, but I cannot say enough about our defense.”

Coach love

Van Dorselaer in particular garnered his share of coach love.

 “He is such a talented athlete,” Dodge said to Waters. “He just keeps getting better and better as the season goes along.”

The Dragons are 5-0 for the season, 3-0 in District 4-6A. Next up: Keller on Oct. 4.


Van Dorselaer told Waters he is getting more comfortable on defense.

“I like the aggressiveness of playing defense,” he said. “On offense, you know what the play is going to be. But on defense, you have to react on the fly. And I like knowing I have a chance to make a play on every play on defense.”

The question is how the Dragons will be affected by the loss of Wormley. Can they continue to be a force to reckon with or will their plans for a deep playoff run be disrupted.

The Star-Telegram game story mentioned that Carroll, which for the fourth consecutive year has started 5-0, is seeking its 7th undefeated regular season in the past 14 years.

Another undefeated season seems a reasonable expectation. The only possible bump in the road could be the 4-0 Northwest Texans, who face Carroll at home on Oct. 17. The Texans have sent Mansfield Legacy, McKinney North Keller and Eaton packing this year. They face L.D. Bell on Oct. 3

Keller is next up for the Dragons on Oct. 4 in its disgrace of a football stadium, the KISD Athletic Complex. Since I feel another rant coming on, I’ll leave that topic for another day.

Before signoff, a word about the streaming of Carroll games by the Dragon Sports Network. A medical procedure earlier in the week kept me from attending the game, so I tuned in to the online broadcast.

Thankfully, they seemed to have worked out the technical kinks in the system, and announcers Chris Blake and Robert Clayton are well-informed and a joy to follow. I found it to be a most enjoyable way to watch the Dragons.

Nothing beats attending the games in person. But if circumstances make that impossible, the online streaming is a great way to feel like a part of the show.

Go, Dragons!


Mum's the word at the Homecoming Game!


Saturday, September 21, 2024

Another Trinity thriller: Southlake Carroll 56, Euless Trinity 48

Angelo Renda hands the ball to four-star running back Riley Wormley.

A grim, smashmouth struggle

BEDFORD – History tells us that any time Euless Trinity and Southlake Carroll meet, it frequently results in high school gridiron gold, and last night’s District 4-6A clash at venerable Pennington Stadium was no exception.

The Trojans gave their Dragon neighbors – the two schools are located only 10 miles apart – almost more than they could handle as the two squads waged a grim, smashmouth back-and-forth struggle in the second half of last night’s contest.

Led by dual-threat quarterback TJ Tupou, the Trojans put on an offensive fireworks display that had the Dragons gasping for breath as they hung desperately to a single-score lead until the final buzzer.

If the Dragons weren’t loaded with an equally explosive offensive arsenal themselves, and if they hadn’t managed to carve out a beefy 35-14 halftime lead, the evening might have ended badly for the Southlake heroes.

As it was, Trojan runners scoured the porous Carroll offense – undersized as always – and Trojan receivers brushed aside the Dragon secondary to keep Trinity not only competitive, but within grasp of victory until the last seconds of the game.

In the end, it came down to a single play as the clock ticked inexorably to zero. But plenty of drama preceded it.

Cutting the lead

The Trojans quickly took charge in the second half. They ended a 62-yard drive with Michael Saafi’s 10-yard TD run that cut the Dragon lead to 35-20 (they missed the PAT).

After forcing Carroll to punt on the next drive, Trinity then launched an 84-yard drive that featured Lukas Sanchez’s 47-yard reception of a Tupou pass and culminated in Tupou’s 1-yard TD sprint. That cut the Dragon lead to 35-27.

Then both teams staged a dramatic, high-stakes series of tit-for-tat scoring drives that kept Dragonheads glued to their seats instead of making their usual exodus after halftime.

Four-star Dragon running back Riley Wormley caught an Angelo Renda pass and darted 35 yards to widen the Dragon lead to 42-27. The Trojans quickly responded when running JT Harris finished a 58-yard Trinity drive with a 9-yard dash that made it 42-34.

Next up, Renda (28-36, 376 yards) tossed a short pass to Luc Jaquemard, who crossed the field diagonally on his way to a 46-yard TD. Score: 49-34. Seven plays later, Trinity made it 49-41 when Tupou darted 2 yards to paydirt.

Renda, who completed TD passes to five separate receivers, then engineered an 80-yard drive that culminated in a 5-yard spiral that hit sophomore receiver Blake Gunter in the right corner of the endzone. That handed Carroll a 56-41 lead with less than 5 minutes on the clock. Tupou then went into action and led his Trojans 75 yards to the Dragon 3. From there, Harris took in his second TD of the night and brought the Trojans to 56-48, with 3 minutes until the end.

Onside kick

At that point, Trinity tried an onside kick – emulating perhaps the three onside kicks the Dragons staged in the first half, two of which they recovered. Carroll foiled Trojan plans by falling on the ball at the Dragon 48, but the Trojan defense stopped Renda and company cold.

A Dragon punt set Trinity up at its 30, and it quickly drove to the Dragon 41. Now facing 4th-and-3, Tupou dropped back to pass.

For the entire half, Trinity had been able to make short yardage when necessary. Moreover, Tupou had been scary accurate, completing 87 percent of his passes. The inevitability of a first down had Trojan fans on their feet, cheering wildly.

With plenty of time, Tupou zipped the ball to a receiver moving through the wide-open Dragon backfield. His ball sank low and hit the turf, well short of his target. And with a shocking suddenness, the moment of truth had come -- and gone.

With less than a minute and a half left, Renda took a knee twice, and it was finally, mercifully over.

You could almost hear the sigh of relief exhaled by a Dragon crowd worn out by the seesaw battle that had raged in front of them for half the game.

One thing is clear from last night’s matchup. The Dragon D needs work. True, it was facing one of the area’s top offensive teams, but if Carroll has any ambitions in the playoffs – and it does, oh, yes, indeed it does – it must shore up its defenses.

Trinity was averaging just under 300 total yards a game before last night. It rolled to 558 against Southlake. As noted above, Tupou was extremely accurate in the air, even though he couldn’t match Renda’s output in yardage or points. He was particularly adept at mining sideline routes.

Riley Wormley scored twice on the ground and caught a TD pass to boot.


On the ground, the Trojans outpaced the Dragons, 291 yards to 204. Tupou scored three times, ending long drives with short bursts across the line. Harris was the Trojans’ leading scorer, rushing 15 times for 113 yards and two scores. Tupou rolled to 64 yards on 10 carries, and Saafi had 6 for 45. Trinity’s star running back Josh Bell could manage only 41 yards in 11 tries.

Shining brightest

As for Southlake, Wormley, once again, shined brightest in the Carroll constellation. He also was the night’s leading rusher, rolling to 181 yards and two TDs on 15 attempts.

He scored the Dragons’ first TD on its initial drive, but the real crowd-pleaser came later, early in the 2nd quarter. Following Wormley’s TD run and a second by his running partner, Davis Penn, Trinity’s Tupou responded with a 51-yard drive that finally got the Trojans on the scoreboard.

A few seconds later, after taking the handoff on the first play of the Dragons’ next series, Wormley burst untouched through the Trinity line and sprinted 75 yards to the endzone, sending the football parents I was seated near into paroxysms of delight.

And as if that weren’t enough, Wormley also scored in the air, giving Dragonheads a few tense moments in the process.

With Carroll clinging to a 35-27 lead late in the 3rd quarter, Wormley grabbed a 35-yard aerial from Renda, taking a jarring hit in the process. But he shook off the collision and raced to the endzone, then sank to his knees, his helmeted head on the turf.

Thankfully, he sprang to his feet a few moments later and ran off the field, allowing the visitor’s side of Pennington Stadium to start breathing again.

Renda was superb, guiding an offense that kept the surging Trojans at bay with poise and determination. His leading receiver, junior Brock Boyd, nabbed 11 catches for 135 yards and 1 touchdown.

Boyd, who like every Dragon knows the storied history between Southlake and Euless, said last night’s confrontation should be viewed as a learning experience.

“We know what we’re good at, and tonight pointed out what we struggled at, and it’s ultimately just getting back to the meeting room and just improving on the little things,” Boyd told The Dallas Morning News’ Robert Harrod Jr.

Savoring victory

Southlake traveled to Pennington last night still savoring its decisive 33-21 victory last week against what everyone expected would be their most serious district challenger, the Byron Nelson Bobcats.

But Trinity sought desperately to ruin the grand Dragon parade through 4-6A, and it damned near did it.

Carroll head coach Riley Dodge acknowledged that playing the Trojans is never a walk in the park.

“It was really stressful,” Dodge told the Fort Worth Star Telegram’s Charles Baggarly after the game. “But it was a quality win versus a really good football team. We knew we had a challenge defensively with their offense, and it obviously showed up on the scoreboard. We knew it was gonna possibly be a shootout tonight.”

Angelo Renda tossed TD passes to five separate receivers last night.


To the DMN’s Harrod, he was more blunt.

“It wasn’t pretty, but we found a way to get the win,” Dodge said.

Next week, the Dragons host Keller Timber Creek in the Homecoming game at Dragon Stadium. After the exertions of the last two weeks, Carroll might be expected to feel a bit of a breather is in order. But Dodge dismissed the thought.

“We just played two big games, but we have so much to improve on,” he told Harrod. “There’s so much to improve on and clean up, and we’ve got to continue to get better.”

Go Dragons!

Dragon defensive lineman Austin Davidge latches on to Trojan QB TJ Tupou.

Saturday, September 14, 2024

Leaping a district hurdle: Southlake Carroll 33, Byron Nelson 21

 

Head coach Riley Dodge, now executive athletic director for Carroll ISD, celebrates with his players last night after their decisive win over Byron Nelson.

Capitalizing on mistakes

SOUTHLAKE – Wise men have declared that capitalizing on the mistakes of your opponent often is the key to victory – no matter the endeavor.

And so it was last night, when the Southlake Carroll Dragons bested a talented and fired-up Byron Nelson team in a spirited clash that probably decided the District 4-6A championship.

If not for a Bobcat fumble on the first play of the 2nd quarter, followed by a blocked Byron Nelson punt in its own endzone 2 minutes later, it might have been a very different game – filling Dragonheads with nervous twitches instead of a spreading glow of satisfaction.

As it came to pass, junior Dragon linebacker Marcus Brouse recovered the fumble, and junior quarterback Angelo Renda engineered a 74-yard drive that rushing phenom Riley Wormley capped with a 35-yard TD run.

The blocked punt, which sophomore Blake Gunter knocked down in the Bobcat endzone, garnered Carroll a 2-point safety and forced the Bobcats to free kick from their own 20. Three plays later, Renda lofted a 50-yard pass to receiver Luc Jaquemard (4 receptions for 82 yards), who slipped quickly across the goal line.

With the Dragons now leading 23-7, the night essentially was over for the unfortunate Bobcats. To their credit, they never panicked, and they never gave up.

Lost momentum

But they were never able to regain the momentum shattered by the fumble and the failed punt, even after Bobcat RB Sean Robinson, narrowed Carroll’s lead to 23-14 as the 1st half wound down.

Of course, even without the miscues, it would have been a rough night for Byron Nelson.

Unlike the Dragons, who roared into the 2024 season by demolishing Midland and Hebron by wide margins, the Bobcats have been living on the edge. They had to stage come-from-behind, last-gasp efforts to slip by Wolfforth Frenship and Lewisville.

Relying on that kind of risky gamesmanship doesn’t work against the Dragons. Not this year, blessed as they are with an aggressive, highly productive offensive machine, headed by Carroll’s dynamic rushing duo of Wormley and junior Davis Penn, and helmed by talented junior Angelo Renda.

Wormley and Penn combined for 224 yards and 3 TDs, two for Wormsley on the ground and one in the air for Penn.

From the outset, both had their way with the Bobcat defense. On his first run of the night, Wormley – who gained 140 yards against Bryon Nelson – sped 16 yards, followed by Penn, whose first run garnered 11 yards. And so it went throughout the night.

Renda, whose confidence grows with every game, was equally brilliant. He completed 72 percent of his passes for 167 yards and two TDs.

His first TD throw was an 8-yard zipline to Penn, which tied the score at 7-7. It capped an 8-play, 75-yard series in response to Bryon Nelson’s opening-drive score, a nifty march downfield that signaled the Bobcats meant business.  

Wide receiver Brock Brady leaps for more yardage after catching an Angelo Renda pass.

Renda’s second score came when he tossed a 50-yard beauty to Jaquemard that essentially sealed Byron Nelson’s fate.

Blunting the offense

Meanwhile, the Dragon D blunted the Bobcats’ heralded offensive array, which before last night was averaging 40 points and 453 total yards per game (stats compiled by The Dallas Morning News). Against the Dragons, Bryon Nelson could manage only 315 total yards and 21 points.

Even that stat is a bit misleading. The Bobcats’ final score – a dazzling 57-yard pass from QB Grant Bizjack to WR Ezra Malamura, who seized it despite being surrounded by Dragons in the endzone – came with only 49 seconds on the clock. That was long after the Dragons had surged to an insurmountable 33-14 lead, and the Dragon Marching Band had launched into “Hey, Baby,” the traditional signal that a Carroll victory is assured.

Dragon defenders sacked Bizjack six times and limited leading rusher Tucker James to only 84 yards and a single score, a 6-yard bolt that opened Bobcat scoring. Despite the harassment, the worthy Bizjack completed an amazing 89 percent of his passes for 199 yards, but – tellingly – only 1 TD.

Defensive standouts included junior backs Luke Bussman and William Chen, who sacked Bizjack twice during the Bobcats’ final offensive series.

Senior defensive back Jack Van Dorselaer, the Dragons’ highly regarded tight end, demonstrated the wisdom of his switch from offense to defensive back, a move intended to bolster weaknesses in the Dragon secondary. He’ll play on offense at the next level, but for the time being, he’s quickly becoming a linchpin to the Dragon D.

Van Dorselaer told the DMN’s Greg Riddle that he and his colleagues learned a few things against Bizjack and the Bobcats.

‘Who we are’

“I think we found out who we are, and we’re a tough team,” Van Dorselaer said. “Defense, we chose violence, that was the biggest thing this week. Playing offense for three years, it’s a little bit different than defense. Defense is a lot more violent.”

The pace of the game slowed considerably in the 2nd half. Both defenses tightened, and the sole score in the 3rd period was a 30-yard field goal by Carroll’s Clark Lemmermann, a junior. He later missed a 48-yarder by a whisker.

Early in the 4th, the Dragons – justifiably wary of the explosive potential of Bizjack and the Bobcats – hung grimly to a not-entirely-comfortable 26-14 lead. At that point, Wormley and Penn took matters in hand, headlining a grinding, 67-yard scoring drive.

Wormley, a USC commit, got the series started with a 27-yard bolt, and Penn, who’s headed to Baylor, carried the Dragons to the Bobcat 2, where Wormley plowed into the endzone. It was his second TD and ended Carroll scoring.


Jack Van Dorselaer, 88, congratulates Riley Wormley, 1, after a touchdown run.

As noted previously, in defeating Byron Nelson in their first district game of the 2024 season, the Dragons become odds-on favorites to seize the District 4-6A crown.

Of course, they still must play the rest of the 4-6A field. But realistically, Byron Nelson posed the most serious – OK, let’s face it, the only serious – challenge to Carroll 4-6A dominance this year.

The chief thing they must guard against is complacency. Although District 4-6A is not a powerhouse district, it contains programs that on any given night – and if they can catch Carroll napping – could upend the Dragon bulldozer rumbling toward them.

Friday was a red-letter day for Southlake athletics for another reason, too. Head coach Riley Dodge was elevated to executive director of athletics for Carroll ISD, which puts him in charge of the district’s entire athletic program. It’s a big job, but Dodge has demonstrated he can handle the pressure and the expectations that come with it.

Football royalty

Dodge, son of the legendary Todd Dodge, who took Carroll to four state championships in a five-year span, is football royalty in Southlake – and in the entire state, for that matter.

He has refocused, reinvigorated and renewed enthusiasm for Carroll’s storied football program since being named head coach in 2018. Since then, he has compiled an extraordinary 81-8 record and led the Dragons deep into the playoffs every year, including a trip to the championship game in 2021.

His elevation runs counter to the current trend in high school athletics. Once it was common for the head of football operations to guide the entire athletic program. But in recent years, administrators have separated the two jobs, guided by the reasonable conviction that both positions are full-time posts that no one person can handle effectively.

The move may have been to provide incentive for Dodge to remain in Southlake. Lord knows his success here makes him highly recruitable. His elevation to the college coaching ranks probably is inevitable.

If any person can keep all the balls in the air, Dodge may be that person. A telling indication of his success, charisma and inspirational presence was on display last night during pre-game activities at Dragon Stadium.

It was Dragon Youth Football night, and all the kids in Southlake’s version of peewee football ran through the huge inflatable dragon’s head to the cheers and applause of the crowd.

There were hundreds of youngsters, almost double the number of kids who participated in the program before Dodge arrived. They bear vivid evidence of the impact of the philosophy of inclusion and recognition he pursues as head coach, a point of view pursued by his father and that now once again imbues Dragon athletics.

The DMN’s Riddle described the scene as Dodge stood before his team after the game and demonstrated one of his strongest traits – the ability to focus young minds on what’s ahead, not what’s in front of them. To keep them directed on future objectives, not current accomplishments.

“This,” he said, “isn’t going to be the highlight of our season.”

No, indeed. Go, Dragons!

Dragon linebacker William Leins gives Bobcat Anthony Sexton something to think about in last night's destruction of Byron Nelson.

Saturday, September 7, 2024

No contest: Southlake Carroll 59, Hebron 16

 

The Southlake Carroll Dragons came roaring out of pre-district play last night, signaling their readiness for the march to a District 4-6A championship.

If at first you don’t succeed …

Angelo Renda demonstrated last night the diamond-bright truth of the old adage that it matters little how you begin an effort. It all comes down to how you finish.

Renda, a junior still getting used to the role of field general for the Southlake Carroll Dragons, fumbled his first snap from center in the Dragons’ non-district clash with the Hebron Hawks.

That misstep led to Hebron’s second field goal of the night and left Carroll in the rare and uncomfortable role of trailing 6-0 halfway through the first quarter.

But Renda quickly shook the cobwebs out of his helmet and led Carroll on a seven-touchdown scoring spree that overwhelmed and humiliated a sturdy, but outmatched Hebron squad.

The junior quarterback completed 13 of 19 passes for 237 yards and touchdown passes to sophomore Brody Knowles (3 receptions, 91 yards) and junior Brock Boyd (6-87).

Daring duo

On the ground, the Dragons’ daring duo – senior Riley Wormsley and junior Davis Penn shattered the Hebron defense, racking up five TDs between them. Wormsley, a USC commit, ran 63 yards on 11 carries and scored three times. Baylor commit Penn ran six times for 69 yards and two scores.

A 25-yard field goal by junior Gavin Strange, and a 9-yard TD run from backup QB Preston Perazzo completed Dragon scoring.

Renda readily took responsibility for his first-snap bobble, but he kept the big picture front and center.

“I have to take ownership of that fumble,” he told The Dallas Morning News’ Rick Kretzschmar. “I didn’t like that because one of our team goals every game is no turnovers. Another team goal is how we handle adversity, and I’m proud of the way we fought back.”

That’s the kind of maturity and stay-focused mentality that head coach Riley Dodge instills in his players. And it's why Southlake stands near the top of most state rankings.

Family commitments, centering around the recent birth of my first grandchild, kept me from traveling to the Hebron blowout. That necessarily means this game account will be short and sweet.

Hosting the Bobcats

Next week, the Dragons begin District 4-6A play by hosting the Byron Nelson Bobcats at Dragon Stadium in a contest that could very well determine who will be district champions.

The Bobcats, as Dragonheads remember bitterly, shocked the Dragons 34-17 in last year’s regular-season matchup, seizing the 4-6A crown that Carroll already had dusted off space for in its trophy case.

The Dragons sought and received vindication later in the year by obliterating the Bobcats 56-7 in the regional finals, sounding taps on Byron Nelson’s best season in program history. That helped ease a bit the sting of the initial insult, which ended a 38-game district winning streak by the Dragons.

But the seeds of a neighborly feud were sown.

Bobcat coach Travis Pride acknowledged to the Fort Worth Star Telegram’s Mike Waters the challenge his team faces in its clash with Dragons.

“Southlake has a great team every year,” Pride said. “Their program is the type program we are trying to build here. It will be a big game. And our guys are looking forward to it. I am sure Southlake Carroll will be ready and so will we. Gotta clean up a few things, but we will be prepared.”

Pride knows that when Byron Nelson comes gunning for the Dragons next week, it will have to have its weapons oiled and loaded. Because by all appearances, Carroll is a dreadnought readying to blast its way through the 4-6A battleline.

Go Dragons! 


The Bryon Nelson Bobcats will seek to be Dragon killers once again this season, but they'll have their hands full in the attempt.