Rare Quarterback Duo On The Rise

SPRINGDALE — His stomach ached out of nervousness as Fayetteville quarterback Brandon Allen walked into the room, on the eve of the 2008 Top Gun QB1 Quarterback Challenge.

Shiloh Christian quarterback Kiehl Frazier already knew plenty about Allen. They had competed against one another in a few youth baseball games. And people had started uttering their names together after their successful ninth-grade football seasons, beginning the trend of comparing the two that unavoidably continues to this day.

But hearing about, and actually meeting, Allen were two entirely different concepts to Frazier.

“It was really weird. It was kind like meeting a celebrity, really, because I had heard so much about him,” Frazier said. “There seemed to be so much hype about us already, so it was great to finally meet and get it over with. We just introduced ourselves and clicked from there. He’s a really cool guy, and he’s a good friend.”

They could’ve been rivals. The junior quarterbacks, two of the highest-rated quarterback prospects nationally in the Class of 2011, could’ve big-timed one another. They could’ve sparked a bitter, intense relationship. Instead, Allen and Frazier chose that day to commence an ever-growing friendship.

These days, though, they find little time to keep in touch.

Frazier is busy trying to lead one-loss Shiloh Christian to another Class 4A state championship. Allen is occupied with hopes of leading 4-2-1 Fayetteville to a 7A-West Conference title. And all the while, they’re each dealing with the daily demands of an already exhaustive recruiting process.

The situation is simply unprecedented in Northwest Arkansas. Forget the personal connection between Allen and Frazier for a moment. All of the country’s top college head coaches, offensive coordinators and quarterbacks coaches have sent letters or visited the area. And they haven’t contacted one quarterback over the other. Most want to sway both of them.

“I can’t recall a time when two quarterbacks in the same class were as good as Brandon and Kiehl,” Fayetteville coach Daryl Patton said. “They’re different quarterbacks, but they both have unbelievable God-given ability and talent. To have both of those kids here in the area, and maybe both go to Arkansas, I think you could be set at that position for a long time.”

Top Of The Class

Even in recent years, the state of Arkansas has sent quality quarterbacks to stand out at Division I schools.

Mitch Mustain of Springdale started for the Razorbacks as a freshman and has since moved on to USC. Kodi Burns of Fort Smith headed to Auburn before switching to wide receiver. Ryan Mallett spent many of his childhood years in Lincoln before becoming the Hogs’ current signal caller.

But as Patton said, it’s hard to remember a time when two quarterbacks of that caliber entered college at the same time. Especially two who look the part of a pro-style quarterback the way Allen and Frazier do. They both stand 6-foot-3, and Frazier weighs only seven pounds heavier (212) than Allen (205).

“It’s the best Division I quarterback class that I’ve ever seen,” said Dudley Dawson, recruiting editor for Hawgs Illustrated. “That’s including Allen, Frazier, (Dumas quarterback Darion) Griswold and a couple others. That said, Brandon and Kiehl are right at the top of it.”

Dawson said Allen and Frazier each possess the physical talents and mental attributes needed to impress any school. Their respective willingness to improve on identified weaknesses has helped them on two fronts, Dawson said.

On the field. And in the minds of college coaches.

“Kiehl has shown so much development since last year,” Dawson said. “He used to be a guy that just got stuff done with his feet and flung the ball. He’s turned into a guy who has pinpoint accuracy and great footwork, and he’s certainly a dual-threat quarterback.”

Dawson also lauded Allen’s improved mobility and throwing accuracy.

“He can make any of the throws,” Dawson said. “He has the strongest arm of the top three, and he certainly has shed the label this year that he has no mobility. He’s run for tons of yards and he runs hard.”

The fact Dawson described different flaws and different improvements for Allen and Frazier proves that — despite their similar builds — these really are two different quarterbacks.

Mentally, however, they each revealed this offseason they could learn from criticism and develop as leaders.

Getting Better

The interceptions piled up fast for Allen in 2008.

He threw 20 of them, in fact, and Patton and Fayetteville offensive coordinator Jared McBride could only grimace as Allen continued to struggle down the stretch. But both coaches could see glimpses of greatness. Allen still tossed 30 touchdowns and showed off a powerful arm that resulted in a plethora of dropped passes.

So this summer, Allen worked daily on his footwork and decision-making with McBride — a former UA quarterback. Patton has seen vast improvement, and Allen admitted he’s “making better decisions than ever.”

“Brandon’s done a great job of stepping up in the pocket, relying less on his feet and trusting his receivers,” Patton said. “Last year, it seemed like he was a little gun-shy every time something didn’t look right. He’d move his feet and lose track of his receivers down the field.”

“He’s much better at not forcing the football and at throwing it away, as well.”

Allen’s offseason commitment has resulted in a massive turnaround in his touchdown-to-interception ratio. He has 18 touchdowns to only three interceptions this season.

McBride also commented that Allen’s demeanor has changed as a junior. Surrounded by many seniors last season, Allen deferred his role as a leader for the Bulldogs. Now, he doesn’t hold back — not as much, at least.

“He’s one of the best leaders I’ve been around,” Patton said. “He’s a winner and has great confidence in his abilities, but he’s not one of those ‘look-at-me’ kind of guys who draws attention to himself. The kids would go through brick walls for him. Brandon doesn’t speak a lot, but when he does speak, it’s like dropping 1,000 bricks. Everyone pays attention.”

Frazier has evolved in a similar way this season, Shiloh Christian coach Josh Floyd said, but his quarterback still remains pretty subdued during games.

That quiet confidence has stemmed from Frazier’s offseason regimen that took place just as much inside as outside. Frazier spent countless hours over the summer in front of a TV, watching film from last season when he split time with David Matthews.

“I didn’t really know all that was going on last year,” Frazier said. “I knew I had to get better chemistry with my receivers.”

Floyd said Frazier learned from his mistakes and has nearly mastered the Saints’ offense, allowing him to identify his reads much quicker. Too often last season, Frazier simply scrambled for yardage — partly because he could, partly because he gave up on his receivers.

But Frazier appears in complete control now, which has helped during tense situations, Floyd said.

“The thing with Kiehl that I love is he’s very calm,” Floyd said. “The game could be on the line and he may be smiling, but he’s not bothered by things. He’s not a Tim Tebow who goes around yelling at his teammates, but at the same time, he’s directing the offense and he knows where every person is supposed to go.

“That wasn’t the case last year. Last year, he just tried to make sure what he was supposed to do.”

In It Together

Maybe these two quarterbacks have found it so easy to relate because of their similarities, exemplified by their persistent work in the offseason. Floyd and Patton each used the word “humble” several times during interviews to describe their quarterbacks.

Allen and Frazier both expressed genuine admiration and respect when asked to tell their impressions of the other. And that’s certainly part of what has excited college recruiters.

The process has been intriguing thus far, to be sure, not that the two quarterback buddies have discussed their recruiting dramas much.

“We don’t really talk about football,” Frazier said. “We just talk about girls and school and stuff like that. Every now and then, I’ll ask him where he likes and wants to go, and he’ll do the same. But that’s not what we’re interested in right now.”

Frazier has received seven scholarship offers — the biggest names being Arkansas, Auburn and Miami — and should get plenty more. In fact, he took an unofficial visit to Notre Dame last Saturday. Meanwhile, Allen has only one offer — from Arkansas — as schools seem scared off by the fact his father, Bobby, is an assistant coach for the Razorbacks.

They have spoken in the past about the possibility of suiting up together for the Hogs — and subsequently, competing against each other. For now, however, they don’t see one another as quarterbacks competing for scholarships, despite the endless comparisons.

Allen and Frazier view themselves as friends, simple as that. Frazier even said he wanted to challenge Allen at his favorite video game — NCAA Football 2010.

“It’s nice to be able to talk to Kiehl about other stuff, regular stuff, you know,” Allen said. “One day, we’ll get into all the college talk a lot, I’m sure. But neither of us has wanted to. And that’s fine with me.”

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Har-Ber Hoping To Stay Undefeated

SPRINGDALE — Springdale Har-Ber has grown accustomed to the targets on its backs this season.

Being the only team in the 7A-West Conference with an undefeated record has been very rewarding for the Wildcats, but it’s also made things very tough.

Every week, Har-Ber (7-0, 4-0) has been trying to over-prepare itself for its opponents, knowing in advance it’ll be getting a tough game.

“It’s kind of a two-sided deal,” Har-Ber coach Chris Wood said. “We love being undefeated and showing we’ve played well to this point, but we also realize teams are trying to knock us off, and that can be tough. We dodged a bullet against (Rogers) Heritage and we’ve got to try and find a way to keep doing that with three games left on our schedule.”

Har-Ber’s last three games certainly won’t be easy, either.

After playing Fort Smith Southside tonight, the Wildcats will host Fayetteville before wrapping up the regular season at Bentonville. All three — Southside, Fayetteville and Bentonville — have only one conference loss this season.

In fact, Har-Ber lost twice to Southside last season, once during the regular season (27-22) and again in the semifinals of the playoffs (8-7).

Although the Rebels (5-2, 3-1) are coming off a 34-26 home loss against Fayetteville last week, Williams said his team has played very well on the road and that he’s confident about his team’s chances.

“Anytime you play at home, you’re used to the surroundings, but it seems like we’ve been a pretty good road team this year,” Williams said. “We’re playing pretty good football.”

Wood said it’s no secret that both the Wildcats and Rebels will try to establish their running games tonight, the one area that’s been effective for both teams. Both teams have go-to guys in the backfield — Har-Ber has junior Gordon Welch (781 yards, nine touchdowns) while Southside has David Adair (718 yards, four touchdowns) and Lee Hollis (313 yards, nine touchdowns).

Meanwhile, both teams also possess two of the best defenses in the conference, as Har-Ber has given up only 109 rushing yards this season.

“They have so many talented guys on both sides of the ball,” Wood said. “It’s a tough matchup for us. Both teams are going to try and run the ball and both teams are going to rely on their defenses to get the job done. Hopefully we can come away with no turnovers and just rely on what we’ve done well this season.”

TIMES RECORD SPORTS WRITER KEVIN TAYLOR CONTRIBUTED TO THIS REPORT.

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Pearce Proving Worth For Wildcats

102309fbhpearcefeatSPRINGDALE — When Eric Pearce isn’t doing homework or practicing football each week, he’s either doing one of two things.

Everyday he wakes up at 6 a.m. and heads to an area gym, where he puts himself through a rigid workout routine for nearly two hours before school. Sometimes, when time allows, Pearce goes back to the gym later at night, simply because he “loves the feeling of getting a good workout.”

Other times, the senior nose guard spends countless hours at both Springdale Har-Ber’s field house and at home watching game film, constantly preparing himself for the Wildcats’ upcoming opponent.

Pearce’s dedication to making himself bigger and stronger while constantly preparing himself for other teams by watching film are a few of the many reasons Har-Ber coach Chris Wood said he’s one of the best defensive lineman he’s ever coached.

“He’s one of the best in the state, and it’s weird because nobody talks about him,” Wood said. “He plays gap-to-gap, he controls the middle and is always getting double teamed. He’s going to be a next-level guy, but he gets lost in the mix because he doesn’t put up ungodly stats.

“But he definitely one of the biggest pieces to our defensive puzzle.”

When Pearce lines up against other teams on Friday nights, he said he’s already watched so much film that he knows exactly what teams are going to do, whether it’s what quarterbacks do or how blocking schemes are set up.

This season, Pearce has totaled 26 tackles, including nine for losses. He’s also had four sacks, nine quarterback pressures and one blocked kick.

“I really love my position,” Pearce said. “Who wouldn’t like going around and chasing a quarterback? It’s a lot of fun for me to get in there, hit some guys and get our defense going in the right direction. In our 4-3 scheme, we’re big believers that what we do starts up front.”

Travis Moreland, Har-Ber’s defensive coordinator, said because other teams sometimes put so many guys on Pearce, it always opens up other opportunities for Har-Ber’s defense.

This Wildcats have totaled 24 sacks, 23 quarterback pressures and eight interceptions, including two returned for touchdowns.

“Eric uses his hands so well and he has a great first step off the ball,” Moreland said. “Throughout the offseason, he really worked on his side-to-side movement, and he’s really improved.”

Although Pearce has been happy with Har-Ber’s defensive results this season, he said there’s still plenty of room for improvement.

“We’ve got to find ways to keep getting better, that’s the bottom line,” Pearce said. “We’ve worked hard to get to this point, but I feel like we can’t let up. We’re on a mission to get a championship ring and we’re not going to stop until we achieve that.”

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Bentonville Edges Fayetteville

VBH FAYETTEVILLE BENTONVILLEBENTONVILLE — A little change didn’t faze the Bentonville Lady Tigers.

Despite playing without sophomore setter/hitter Rebecca Brown, Bentonville changed offenses and grinded to a tough 16-25, 25-21, 25-16, 24-26, 15-12 win to knock Fayetteville out of a share of the 7A-West Conference title Tuesday in Tiger Arena.

Bentonville (22-11-1, 11-3 in 7A-West) broke from a 10-10 tie in the fifth set with a 5-1 run to end it. Senior Sydney Thurow’s third ace of the match finished it for the Lady Tigers.

Bentonville coach Michelle Coens said Brown’s loss was a big one, but senior Morgan Hayes stepped up to run a 5-1 and junior Sara Hoover played strong on the back row in the sophomore’s absence. Hayes and Brown had split duties all season in a 6-2 offense.

“She’s (Brown) a very big player,” Coens said. “She plays all the way around. Morgan Hayes played very well and Sara Hoover played phenomenally in the back row.”

Hayes finished with 45 assists, while libero Shanna Seyfarth had a match-high 25 digs.

Brown injured her ankle during Bentonville’s loss to Greenwood on Saturday and was on the bench with her ankle wrapped Tuesday.

Coens would not comment on Brown’s status for next week’s state tournament.

“We’re getting her healthy,” Coens said.

Bentonville looked as though it would end the match in four sets, but Fayetteville (20-12-1, 11-3 in 7A-West) used an 8-1 run to claw back from a 23-18 deficit to force a fifth set.

Senior Sarah Pfitzinger, who finished with a match-high 17 kills, had two kills and a block assist in the rally.

Fayetteville coach Jessica Phelan said the Lady Purple’Dogs struggled out of serve receive much of the night.

“I don’t think we ever got in a great rhythm off serve receive,” Phelan said. “I mean, they are a great serving team and they won that serve-and-pass battle tonight.”

Thurow led a diverse Bentonville attack with 15 kills out the middle, while outside hitters Danielle Bets and Shayne Wiedemann added 14 and 10 kills, respectively. Haley Martin added 13 kills for Fayetteville.

The Lady Purple’Dogs had a shot a sharing the league title with Springdale Har-Ber, but Bentonville took care of that.

Fayetteville will now be the second seed, while the two-time defending state champion Lady Tigers will be the third seed in the state tournament in Van Buren. The Lady Purple’Dogs will get a first-round bye and play at 6 p.m. Oct. 28. Bentonville will play at 2 p.m. Oct. 27 against the No. 6 seed from the Central.

Coens said the win was especially big for the seniors in their final home match.

“Our goal was to win tonight,” Coens said. “It didn’t matter three, four or five. Senior night is a special night for the girls and now we focus on the big trophy.”

Fayetteville came out red-hot in game one, pulling away with a 14-3 run. But Bentonville adjusted and Phelan said her team did not.

“We’ve gotta give ourselves another chance to swing at the ball,” Phelan said. “We have great offense. Bentonville did a good job of adjusting. They started tipping balls on us. We’ve got to get those up to give ourselves another swing.

“That’s frustrating,” she added. “Hopefully that can fuel a good week of practice.”

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Lady Tigers Claim State Tennis Title

AZ 7A TENNIS.JPGFAYETTEVILLE — Bentonville coach Paul Pautsch assembled the Tigers and Lady Tigers tennis teams for a pep talk before semifinal play at the Class 7A State Tournament at the Billingsley Tennis Center Tuesday morning. Pautsch also asked those Bentonville parents in attendance to join in.

Near the end of his talk, Pautsch asked how many players, or parents, had ever won a state championship. Three answered in the affirmative.

That number is now nine.

Amy Anderson and Kendall Kraus roared to the doubles championship and senior Oksana Hillyer was the singles runner-up for the second straight year as the Lady Tigers captured the state championship with 13 points. Mount St. Mary was second with nine points.

The Lady Tigers have won four of the last five state championships and Pautsch has guided the school to six state titles since 1993.

Anderson and Kraus defeated Jessica and Jennifer Word of Van Buren 6-1, 6-4 in the semifinals before ending with a 6-2, 6-0 victory against Little Rock Central’s Lindsey Liles and Trinity Randolph.

“I said I had the best doubles team (Anderson-Kraus) in the state all year long, and they came out and played that way,” Pautsch said. “They were an absolutely phenomenal doubles team for the last two years.”

Mount St. Mary’s Rebecca Bailey defeated Hillyer in the finals for the second straight year after posting a 6-0, 6-3 victory. Bailey defeated Bentonville’s Morgan Ryan 6-1, 6-2 in the semifinals.

The Bentonville boys finished in second after leading the tournament after Monday’s first two rounds. Little Rock Central won the school’s 11th consecutive title, edging the Tigers 12-11. The Bentonville doubles team of sophomores Matt Tabler and Zach Ellis won the doubles title but the Tigers watched Central’s Mario Martinez defeat Fayetteville’s Rob Hodous in the singles final to give Central the championship.

Martinez overcame severe cramping to defeat Hodous 6-4, 1-6 ,7-6 (7-5). Both players will advance to next week’s Overall Championships.

“I drank too much Gatorade and it made me cramp, so I had to change my strategy,” Martinez said. “I can’t run to the ball and I had to take the angles away. I was really glad that I was able to pull it out at the end. I was never going to quit. I’m representing the school.”

Ellis and Tabler defeated Central’s Bobby Emerson and Austin Crawford 6-4, 3-6, 7-5 to run their record to 15-0 on the year. They also advance to the Overall Championships.

“Those two sophomores came out and they absolutely played their guts out,” Pautsch said. “They could have rolled over. They were way up, and then they got down. They could have quit but they didn’t.”

CLASS 7A STATE TENNIS TOURNAMENT

Boys Singles

Semifinals

Hodous, Fayetteville defeated Fox, LR Catholic 6-2, 6-0

Martinez, LR Central defeated Blake, FS Southside 7-5, 6-2

Finals

Martinez defeated Hodous 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (7-5)

Boys Doubles

Semifinals

Z. Ellis-Tabler, Bentonville defeated Bagwell-Dunn, Van Buren 6-4, 7-5

Emerson-Crawford, LR Central defeated B. Ellis-Shah, Bentonville 6-3, 6-4.

Finals

Z. Ellis-Tabler defeated Emerson-Crawford 6-4, 3-6, 7-5

Girls Singles

Semifinals

Hillyer, Bentonville defeated Gray, Russellville 6-1, 6-2

Bailey, Mount St. Mary’s defeated Ryan, Bentonville 6-1, 6-2

Finals

Bailey defeated Hillyer 6-0, 6-3

Girls Doubles

Semifinals

Anderson-Kraus, Bentonville defeated Word-Word, Van Buren 6-1, 6-4

Liles-Randolph, LR Central defeated Skinner-Kincannon, FS Southside 6-1, 7-5

Finals

Anderson-Kraus defeated Liles-Randolph 6-2, 6-0

TEAM STANDINGS

Boys

1-Little Rock Central 12

2-Bentonville 11

3-Fayetteville 7

4-Fort Smith Southside 3

5-Little Rock Catholic 2

5-Van Buren 2

7-Rogers High 1

Girls

1-Bentonville 13

2-Mount St. Mary’s 9

3-FS Southside 4

3-Little Rock Central 4

5-Russellville 2

5-Van Buren 2

7-Rogers High 1

7-Rogers Heritage 1

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Lady Tigers Lead State Tennis Tournament

FAYETTEVILLE — The Bentonville Lady Tigers are in the driver’s seat at the Class 7A State Tournament and the Tigers have a one-point lead going into today’s semifinals and finals at the Billingsley Tennis Center on the University of Arkansas campus.

The Lady Tigers have six points while Mount Saint Mary’s and Fort Smith Southside have four points each. But the Lady Tigers have Oksana Hillyer and Morgan Ryan in the singles semifinals and Amy Anderson and Kendall Kraus in the doubles semifinals. All semifinals matches will start at 10 a.m. today.

Anderson-Kraus are heavy favorites to win the doubles title and Bentonville coach Paul Pautsch said the Lady Tigers should win the tournament if either Hillyer or Ryan make the finals.

Hillyer defeated Fort Smith Southside’s Lauren Gharhemani 6-1, 6-4 in the quarterfinals while Ryan defeated the Lady Rebels’ Ali Grahl 6-3, 6-0 in another quarterfinals match. Anderson-Kraus needed less than an hour to win their quarterfinal match 6-0, 6-0.

“We need our guns, and they are Amy (Anderson) and Kendall (Kraus) and Oksana (Hillyer), to come through and if the do, they will be state champions,” Pautsch said. “That’s just the way it is. If they slip up, they won’t be.”

Both the Tigers’ doubles teams of Zach Ellis and Matt Tabler and Brandon Ellis and Varun Shah advanced to the semifinals to help lead Bentonville to six points, one point ahead of Fayetteville and Little Rock Central. The Bulldogs’ Rob Hodous advanced to the singles semifinals by defeating Bentonville’s Justin Pollard 6-7, 6-2, 6-2.

If the two Bentonville doubles teams win today, it would set up a rematch of the 7A-West Conference doubles finals that was won by Zach Ellis and Tabler.

Brandon Ellis and Shah will face Little Rock Central’s Bobby Emerson and Austin Crawford in the semifinals at 10 a.m. today.

“Brandon and Varun have to play the team from Central and I watched them and they are good,” Pautsch said. “Our guys can beat them if they do some things right.”

Zach Ellis and Tabler will face Van Buren’s Bagwell-Dunn in the other boys’ semifinals.

“We have seen them this year and had good success,” Pautsch said. “But they (Van Buren) have improved and I am impressed with them. They are in a position and now it is up to them.”

Rogers High’s Trent Lamers and Adam Hile advanced to the quarterfinals with a 6-1, 6-1 victory before losing to Ellis-Shah in the quarterfinals. Mounties coach Steve Peck said the quarterfinals finish was one of the best in recent years.

“We played well and we actually played better in this match (quarterfinals loss),” Peck said. “We did well in the first match and this is the first time I have had a doubles team make it past the first round at state. It felt good.”

The Lady Mounties doubles team of Caroline Kelley and Anusha Manjagi also won a first-round match before falling 6-0, 6-2 in the quarterfinals to the Little Rock Central duo of Lindsey Liles and Trinity Randolph.

“In the first match, we limited unforced errors, covered the nets well and played good team tennis,” said Lady Mounties coach Ronnie Cowan. “We were just overpowered in the second match.”

Rogers Heritage freshman Pratheepa Ravikumar won her first round match against Conway’s Mary Leath 6-0, 6-2 before losing in the quarterfinals.

CLASS 7A STATE TENNIS TOURNAMENT


WHEN: 10 a.m. today

WHERE: Billingsley Tennis Center, Fayetteville

Schedule

Boys Singles

Semifinals

Hodous, Fayetteville vs. Fox, Little Rock Catholic 10 a.m.

Martinez, Little Rock Central vs. Blake, FS Southside 10 a.m.

Finals, 1 p.m.

Boys Doubles

Semifinals

Emerson-Crawford, LR Central vs. B. Ellis-Shah, Bentonville 10 a.m.

Z. Ellis-Tabler, Bentonville vs. Bagwell-Dunn, Van Buren 10 a.m.

Finals, 1 p.m.

Girls Singles

Semifinals

Hillyer, Bentonville vs. Gray, Russellville 10 a.m.

Ryan, Bentonville vs. Bailey, Mt. St. Mary’s 10 a.m.

Finals, 1 p.m.

Girls Doubles

Semifinals

Anderson-Kraus, Bentonville vs. Word-Word, Van Buren 10 a.m.

Liles-Randolph, Little Rock Central vs. Skinner-Kincannon, Southside 10 a.m.

Finals, 1 p.m.

TEAM STANDINGS

Boys

1. Bentonville 6

2. Fayetteville 5

2. Little Rock Central 5

4. Fort Smith Southside 3

5. Little Rock Catholic 2

6. Van Buren 2

7. Rogers High 1

Girls

1. Bentonville 6

2. Mount St. Mary’s 4

2. FS Southside 4

4. Russellville 2

4. Van Buren 2

6. Rogers High 1

7. Rogers Heritage 1

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Whitlow Leads War Eagles Up Front

HERITAGE ALLEN WHITLOWROGERS — After being pushed around in the trenches of the 7A-West Conference a year ago, the Rogers Heritage offensive linemen made a vow to get better for the school’s second season.

Extra time was spent in the weight room and there was plenty of watching film.

There is no question that Heritage (5-2, 2-2 7A-West), which was 0-7 in the West a year ago, is a much improved football team in all phases of the game.

The heart of that resurgence is the Heritage offensive line and center Allen Whitlow is the pulse. Despite Friday’s 21-14 overtime loss to top-ranked Springdale Har-Ber, the War Eagles are on the brink of earning a playoff berth.

Heritage is averaging six yards a play and quarterback Reed Brown has completed 129 of 204 passes (63 percent) for 1,719 yards and 20 touchdowns. The War Eagles’ running game is also improved as Heritage is averaging four yards a carry.

And Whitlow is the unquestioned leader on the Heritage offensive front as the 6-foot-1, 220-pound senior has started every game Heritage has played.

“Whitlow is having a great year,” Heritage coach Perry Escalante said. “The improvement he has made this year is he is just bigger and stronger. He is able to finish blocks. Last year, he would he get good blocks, he would get on them, but he couldn’t finish them because of his lack size and strength.

“(Whitlow) is the leader out there and the driving force on the offensive line. But the whole offensive line has played well this year.”

In two seasons as a starter, Whitlow has never been called for a holding penalty and Escalante said he can count on one hand the number of bad snaps Whitlow has had in 17 games.

Whitlow knows that playing on the offensive line is not the most glamorous position on the field but he said the entire line takes pride in helping make the offense go.

“Before every practice, I snap to make sure my snaps are good,” Whitlow said. “We don’t get very much recognition, but I like it because you get to hit somebody every play. The other four guys next to me are like brothers.”

Whitlow credits not having any holding penalties to a combination of technique and luck.

“I’m a little lucky because I’m sure I hold some of the time but I just try to keep my hands inside instead of wrapping them around,” Whitlow said. “We are all bigger, stronger and faster than last year and we are more confident in our blocks.”

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7A-West Report: Welch Handles Load For Wildcats

Gordon WelchGordon Welch was shoved into action real quick for Springdale Har-Ber this season.

Starting tailback Tre Tyler broke his fibula on the eighth play of the season-opener against Greenwood, forcing Welch into service. Since then, Welch has been the most consistent runner in the conference and now leads the 7A-West Conference in rushing.

“He’s literally taken the ball and ran with it,” Har-Ber coach Chris Wood said. “He’s iron-manned up for us.”

In Friday’s hard-earned 21-14 win against Rogers Heritage in overtime, Welch carried 35 times for 147 yards and all three of the Wildcats’ touchdowns.

“We really pounded him up in there,” Wood said. “It’s nothing fancy. It’s all between the tackles.”

Welch leads the conference in both carries with 167 and in rushing yards with 781. Three times this season, he’s had over 30 carries. Five times, he’s went over 100 yards rushing.

“It starts with the guys around him,” Wood said. “The offensive line has blocked well, and the receivers are blocking downfield.”

Friday night, Heritage just dared Har-Ber to run. Welch did.

“They had eight and nine guys in the box,” Wood said. “They knew what we were going to do, and that’s what we did.”

Welch brings a no-nonsense approach to the position for the Wildcats.

“His parents are hard-working down-to-earth people, and so is he,” Wood said. “He’s a blue-collar worker. He comes to work every day with a lunch pail. He’s very humble.”

Welch had 12 carries for 43 yards and no touchdowns last year as a sophomore in mop-up duty.

Friday night, Welch scored on a 3-yard run and a 14-yard in regulation before scoring on a 10-yard run on Har-Ber’s first play of overtime for the win.

Har-Ber Eyes Gauntlet
Har-Ber is No. 2 the Associated Press poll this week, but the Wildcats will be challenged the final three weeks of the regular season with Fort Smith Southside, Fayetteville and former No. 1 Bentonville waiting to knock them off their perch.

“It’s a gauntlet,” Wood said. “All three are very good. We’re aware of that. Fortunately, two of the three are at home.”

Southside visits Jarrell Williams Stadium this week and will be looking to bounce back from a 34-26 loss to Fayetteville.

“It will be a physical ball game,” Wood said. “Their coaching staff does as good a job as anyone in the conference as far as scheming for their opponents.”

That game will also be a rematch from last year’s semifinals, which Southside won, 8-7, with a late touchdown and two-point conversion.

Bentonville Seniors Make History
The rivalry between Bentonville and Rogers High is as old and storied as any in the state.
Friday, Bentonville’s seniors made history by becoming the first class to go undefeated in all three years against the rival Mountaineers.

Bentonville Tigers“It was in the newspaper earlier in the week, and it was brought up after the game,” Bentonville coach Barry Lunney said. “It’s a long rivalry so it goes without saying when you can do something for the first time, it’s pretty special.”

Friday, Bentonville blanked Rogers, 48-0. Last year, Bentonville won 17-15. In 2007, the Tigers prevailed 28-0.

The win was also Bentonville’s biggest over Rogers since a 58-0 win in 1914.

Perfect Tigers
Bentonville was perfect on Friday against Rogers on possessions.

The Tigers did not punt, committed no turnovers and scored on all six offensive possessions.
“We were real efficient,” Lunney said. “We executed really well. We didn’t have any dropped passes. The passes were on target.”

Bentonville led 41-0 at halftime, applying the mercy rule to begin the second half with the continuously running clock. The Tigers scored on all five offensive possessions in the first half and added a defensive touchdown on Christian Larimer’s 33-yard interception return on the second play of the game.

“We were running the ball, and the clock was running,” Lunney said. “We took a lot of time off the clock in the third quarter and were running the ball with our second group in.”

Bentonville took the second-half kickoff and used up the first seven minutes, 17 seconds of the third quarter before scoring.

Bentonville did have a final possession to end the game running out the clock without scoring, which does not count in scoring efficiency.

End Of The Passing Era?
Passing is still the fancy around the state, but the trend is changing in the 7A-West. In 16 conference games played thus far, the team that rushes for the most yards is 14-2.

“It’s an interesting statistic,” said Lunney, who brought the pass-happy Spread attack to the conference in 1996 while at Southside. “I heard somebody on a college game on Saturday talking about the team with the most rushing yards usually wins. It’s still about the ability to run the football.”

Bentonville and Springdale Har-Ber are the leading rushing teams in the conference. Har-Ber is currently the top-ranked team in the state. Bentonville is the former No. 1 team in the state.

“I think we’re seeing an offensive evolution again,” Wood said. “It’s controlling the clock and controlling the game by running it.”

Har-Ber also has the best defense in the conference, which goes hand-in-hand with the philosophy of controlling the game.

“For us, we have a good defense so why would we throw the ball over and over, stopping the clock and extending the game,” Wood said. “We want to protect the ball and not take any chances with it.”

Many of the teams that are running the ball, however, are still in the one-back shotgun Spread attack but with certain philosophies of the Power-I, Wishbone, the Wing-T and Split-back veer.

“There is a little bit of all of each one of those in the Spread,” Wood said. “There are just variations.”

Teams are relying on defense, field position, ball-control offense like the conference did in the 1980s and 1990s.

“It’s like back in the day of Jarrell Williams and Joe Fred Young,” Wood said. “And those guys sure won their share of games.”

Remember When …

There was actually a 7A-West game that ended regulation in a scoreless tie?

In this modern age of offense, so-called basketball on grass and a barrage of scoring, in 2001 Fayetteville and Springdale actually played a scoreless tie in regulation.

Springdale quarterback Damon Moody broke the tie with a short touchdown run in overtime to lift the Red Bulldogs to 6-0 win over their purple rivals at Harmon Field.

Each team had 14 first downs, Fayetteville had 292 yards of offense while Springdale had 242.

It is the last time two 7A-West teams played to a scoreless tie in regulation and the lowest scoring game in the conference in the past eight years.

By Leland Barclay/Special To The Morning News

THAT FIGURES

0 — Turnovers and punts by Bentonville on Friday night
1 — Win needed by Bentonville’s seniors to tie last year’s senior class as the winningest in school history
3 — Scoreless quarters this season by Bentonville, including two in the fourth quarter of mercy-rule victories, out of 28 quarters played
6 — Straight times in which Springdale has defeated Fort Smith Northside at Jarrell Williams Stadium since Grizzlies won 23-12 in 1997
7 — Straight wins by Fayetteville over Fort Smith Southside, all during Daryl Patton’s tenure

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Bulldogs’ Defense Steps Up

Springdale BulldogsSPRINGDALE — Springdale High’s defense showed more confidence Friday night than it has all season long.

The Bulldogs had one of their best defensive performances this season, nearly shutting down Fort Smith Northside’ potent offense.

Besides putting constant pressure on Northside quarterback Tanner Knight, the Bulldogs (3-4, 1-3) also forced the Grizzlies into four turnovers, including three fumbles. The result gave Springdale its first 7A-West Conference victory this season.

“I don’t think there’s any doubt that was (the defense’s) best game,” Springdale High interim coach Dennis DeBusk said. “We’ve been really close all year, but (Friday), they put it all together and had a great game.”

Although Northside totaled 17 first downs and 203 passing yards, it managed only 79 rushing yards.

“Our guys up front and our linebackers, they all did a tremendous job,” DeBusk said. “We can build off this and really build some momentum.”

Posted in 7A, Springdale, The Morning NewsComments (0)

Backup Backs Receive Valuable Carries

Bentonville TigersBENTONVILLE — The future looks bright in the Bentonville backfield.

At the moment, sophomore DeMarcus Murphy and junior Raymond Shackelferd aren’t asked to provide many meaningful carries. Not with talented seniors Courtney Haskell and Shane Boedeker leading the 7A-West Conference’s top rushing attack.

But during the Tigers’ 48-0 victory Friday night over Rogers High, Murphy and Shackelferd showed what Bentonville’s running game will look like next season. Shackelferd rushed 15 times for a game-high 78 yards and Murphy logged six carries for 24 yards.

“They ran hard. They ran really well,” Lunney said. “I was proud of that. Raymond does a lot of scout team work during the week and runs hard for our defense, so it was good to see. It’s a good reward for them to be able to come in and execute.”

Posted in 7A, Bentonville, The Morning NewsComments (0)

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