Saturday, November 2, 2024

Ending on a good note: Southlake Carroll 48, Keller Central 15

 

An unbeaten regular season and a district championship is a nice way to enter the playoffs.

Not much of a challenge

KELLER – The slaughter started early. It took the Southlake Carroll Dragons less than 2 minutes to score their first touchdown against the lowly Keller Central Chargers. And it took them only one play to do it.

No one expected the Chargers to pose much of a challenge to the unbeaten Dragons. And they weren’t. But in effortlessly dispatching Central, Carroll lacked a little of its usual disciplined swagger and displayed a sometimes distracted air to the proceedings.

But what the night lacked in crisp execution and flawless devotion to the game plan, it made up for in an entertaining mishmash of weirdness that had fans on both sides of the stadium shaking their heads in wonderment.

Perhaps it was the lingering effects of Halloween.

As usual, the stars of the Dragon offense led the blood-letting.

Quarterback Angelo Renda completed 75 percent of his passes, compiling 249 passing yards and TD throws to Brock Boyd (3-112, 2 TDs) and Brody Knowles (2-34, 1 TD). On the ground, he rolled to 2 more TDs, both on short-yardage hops inside the 5.

Boyd was his favorite receiver. They connected early – on the first Dragon play of the game in fact. Following a quick 3-and-out and a botched Charger punt, Renda lobbed a perfect 61-yard arc to Boyd as the receiver raced toward the endzone.

Errant punt

The sluggish Chargers’ second drive ended with another errant punt that started Carroll’s next possession at its 43. Six plays later, running back extraordinaire Davis Penn surged 2 yards to send the Dragons a 14-0 lead. He ended the night with 16 carries for 120 yards.

Meanwhile, the Dragon D had no trouble with the Charger offense led by quarterback Landon Smith. Smith managed only 38 yards in the air and was held to 6 rushing yards in the 13 times he attempted to run the ball. He is credited with the 4-yard dash that culminated the Chargers only sustained drive of the night.

Charger running backs Spencer Martin (20-90) and Jordan Brown  (3-68) enjoyed a little better running room, but they were never factors in the contest.

The third Central drive was typical. Carroll D lineman Zac Hays sacked Smith on his own 25 as he struggled to convert on 4th down. This time, the Charger punter managed to get the ball to the Dragon 39, but Carroll’s ensuing possession was plagued by procedural penalties.

Despite some hard running by Penn, the drive ran aground when Penn was stopped for no gain at the Charger 26. Dragonheads then experienced a few minutes of acute concern when Penn got up limping and hobbled off the field.

The junior, a Baylor commit, walked off his discomfort on the sideline and soon returned to play with no further apparent difficulty. But the prospect of losing him – after a knee injury ended Riley Wormley’s season earlier in the year – was bitter, indeed.

The bad mojo created by the scare doomed the Dragon drive, and Carroll had to settle for a 43-yard field goal by Gavin Strange.

Agonies continue

But Central’s agonies would continue. The next Charger drive ended when Carroll D-back Taevin Kunz snagged an interception – his second straight week to do so – and set up a bizarre sequence of plays that transfixed us all.

The Dragons kicked off their drive with a double pass – Renda to Boyd to Brody Knowles – that looked snazzy but didn’t work. But while Dragonheads still  were musing about the failed trick play, Carroll returned to basics and sent Penn plunging through the line and rumbling 65 yards to the end zone.

His labors went unrewarded when a penalty wiped out the score. To add insult to injury, Christian Glenn fumbled the ball on the next play, and Braydon Nichols of the Charger D returned it 77 yards for Central’s first score.

Dragonheads were treated to a slightly crazy game against outmatched Keller Central.


But the craziness didn’t end there. Central’s PAT was blocked by Luke Bussman, who then snatched up the ball and sped 88 yards to the Charger endzone. That denied Central the extra point, added 2 to Carroll’s total and put the score at 19-6.

Renda would add another rushing TD before the end of the half, and the Chargers would claw their way close enough to complete a 27-yard field goal with 28 seconds left in the half.

The fireworks weren’t over, yet. After a kickoff we all thought was perfunctory, Glenn fielded the ball and raced 95 electrifying yards across the Charger goal line.

But once again, Dragon labors went for naught. Glenn’s heroics were erased by penalty, and Carroll – with time running out – lined up for a 49-yard Strange field goal. Befittingly, it failed.

Not what we expected

A 26-6 halftime lead emphatically was NOT what many of us expected to see against Central, a team that has won only one game all season and is winless in 4-6A play.

The third quarter reassured most Dragonheads that the stars were properly aligned and the music of the spheres restored.

Renda got things started with a 6-play, 62-yard drive that he ended with a 5-yard bolt across the line. Things then veered off course again.

On the PAT, the snap went awry, and Dragon holder Zac Hays scrambled to recover it. Barely eluding a pack of Chargers, he completed a desperate side-arm pass as he fell to the turf. Don’t ask me how, but Jacob Bobrowski caught it in the endzone.

Carroll forced a 3-and-out on Smith and company, and two plays later, Renda zipped the ball 17 yards to Knowles, who brought the score to 41-9.

Smith managed to engineer the Chargers only sustained drive of the night, then punctuated it with a 4-yard TD dash.

Scoring for the night ended on the very next Carroll drive in an appropriately upbeat note and with a perfectly predictable cast.

Renda began work on his own 39 (Carroll enjoyed excellent field position all night). He took the snap, looked downfield for Boyd and lofted a 61-yard pass that fell into the junior’s hands.

So ends Carroll’s regular season – its unbeaten season unsullied, its District 4-6A championship secure and with the welcome prospects of a bye week to prepare for the playoffs.

I’m not going to delve into the complicated playoff picture in this post. There’ll be time enough for that next week and the next. For now, it’s time for the Dragons to recoup, regroup and enjoy their accomplishment.

Go, Dragons!

 


The Dragons have a bye week to recoup and regroup for the playoffs.