LUMBERTON — A tipped pass for a touchdown, a tipped pass intercepted and returned for a touchdown, muffed punts, fumbles and a lack offense left the Nederland Bulldogs and Lumberton Raiders in a 14-14 tie at the half.
Nederland boss Larry Neumann and his coaching staff made the right adjusments at the break. Those adjustments included a steady dose of Grant Lovelady, who went for 105 yards on the ground, and ultimately helped the Bulldogs claim a 31-21 victory and a playoff berth that seemed totally unlikely three weeks ago.
Lovelady tallied a total of 124 rushing yards on the night and punched in Nederland’s opening score in the first quarter and opening score in the third quarter.
Lovelady’s efforts combined with a 48-yard boot from kicker Taylor Trahan, the timely passing of Dionte Forney and a clutch performance from Nederland’s defense made the difference on the night.
Lovelady lifted the Dogs to a 21-14 advantage but the Raiders pulled one out of their bag of tricks and completed a 25-yard end around pass from Ryan Hughes to Lance Pace to lock the game at 21-21 with 6:10 left in the third frame.
Trahan broke that tie with his long field goal with 2:46 left in the third.
While that was all Nederland would need, it tacked on some insurance with a 7-yard pitch and catch from Forney to Brent Salenga, who used a block to get to the right edge and dove into the endzone for the score and a 31-21 lead.
But with 11:19 left in regulation, Neumann said his stomach did not come to ease until the Dogs recorded their night’s ninth sack with 10 seconds winding down in the fourth.
Lumberton had used all its time-outs and so the drive and game ended at the Bulldogs’ 30.
“Even when we got that 10 point lead, I was not convinced. They always play us very hard and they did a good job tonight,” said Neumann whose team finishes the regular season whose 4-3, 5-5 outfit finished the season on a three-game winning streak.
Nederland claimed District 20-4A’s two-seed in the big school division and will open the playoffs against Crosby at a time and date to be determined today.
About the nature of the Bulldogs’ playoff berth, Neumann said it was one of the more satisfying seasons he’s ever had as the Nederland chief.
“We’ve had some fine teams here, teams I have enjoyed a whole lot. With all the injuries and things that have been documented in the newspapers and some things that haven’t — it just makes you feel real good as a coach to see this team overcome what they’ve had to overcome,” he said.
“I could not be more proud of a group of kids than I am right now. We found away to win tonight and we found a way to make the playoffs.”
Nederland did not seem to be in control in the first half. The Dogs first score was set up after they recovered a muffed punt at Lumberton’s 11. Lovelady jogged in from there to give Nederland a 7-0 lead.
Much like Nederland’s first score, Lumberton was set up by a fumble on the Bulldogs 20-yard line.
The Raiders’ Jesse Sparks and Hughes hooked up for a 20-yard touchdown to even the score.
On Nederland’s next possession, Forney tossed a pass through the hands of Salenga. Lumberton’s Kyler Keith grabbed that tipped pass and took it 65-yards to go up 14-7 in the first quarter.
Nederland did not respond until late in the second quarter when Forney threw a rope 20 yards down field to Stephen Schlett, who could not haul in the pass. But the ball glanced off his hands and right to Salenga for a game-tying 31-yard touchdown connection.
Just how offensive coordinator Monte Barrow drew it up.
Still, Nederland’s offensive production was rather sluggish in the first half, collecting a total of 102 yards.
“I knew we were going to have to do something,” Neumann explained. “They had a heavy rush on Forney and our sweeps and draw plays weren’t working. It seemed they had us pegged. We felt like we could have some success with the quick traps and that worked out for us.”
Boy did it. Nederland had 15 yards rushing in the first half but ended the game with 141.
Neumann said getting the running game going allowed for the air-attack to open up.
And it did. Forney completed 7-out-of-9 passes in the second half. He was 7-of-17 in the first half.
Lumberton, coming off back-to-back playoff seasons, finished 2-5 in 20-4A and 5-5 overall.
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SLIDESHOW: Giants beat Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI
The New York Giants won their fourth NFL championship Sunday in Indianapolis, scoring in the final minute to defeat New England 21-17.
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Seahawks overcome player shortage, win easily
Matt Cross wondered Wednesday whether Lamar Port Arthur’s basketball team had enough healthy players available to face Kilgore College.
The Lamar State program literally was falling apart before head coach Cross’ eyes. The game clock didn’t work. The players were dropping like Lakeshore mosquitoes.
Point guard Derrick Dawkins had crutches after sustaining a knee injury Saturday. Wing man Elton Roy missed last Saturday’s game with a knee sprain. Opposite wing Eldridge Moore was hobbled by an ankle sprain. Power man Jayon James was sick with bronchitis. Post man Elijah Pittman seemed out of sorts too.
“I’m only about 75 percent,” said the Seahawks third-year coach after canceling a lunch appointment.
It got worse at the start of this 75-50 victory in Carl Parker Center before life improved any on the good ship Seahawk.
Playmaker deluxe Brandon Peters said he was “hit in the mouth” by a Kilgore player’s shoulder.
“I’m going to have to go to the dentist tomorrow morning,” Peters said, shaking his head. “The guy knocked my teeth all the way back.”
Battered and beaten to a pulp, the Seahawks (especially Peters) proved that basketball definitely is played above the shoulders, too.
More than anything else, Lamar State simply relaxed and rebounded. And rebounded some more.
The Seahawks crashed the boards in a way that they have not pounded them in a couple of weeks. They knocked home seven three-pointers and welcomed a special addition to their star of the game show. Lamar State College-Port Arthur, meet Lakeem Duncan.
“We asked one person to step up in practice with Derrick going to the doctor tomorrow (Thursday) and Lakeem did,” his head coach Cross said.
Duncan led the way with 16 points and backcourt buddy Shondel Stewart added 15. Peters changed jerseys (to 32 from his usual 23) after losing blood from being hit in the mouth. Peters had 11 points and 8 boards. Roy patiently treated his wounded knee all weekend with ice and also scored 11. Bum ankle or not, Moore managed 10 boards and 8 points.
And a clean shaven head coach smiled afterwards after every one in Seahawk Nation told him that his team needed to rebound better. After Trinity Valley outrebounded Lamar State by seven on Saturday, the Seahawks returned to work and captured the backboard battle on this night, 33-22.
“I thought we rebounded the ball well consistently,” Cross said. “We’re still No. 1 in our conference and if we can get everybody healthy, we can still have a very good chance to defend our championship.”
Parker Center’s game clock has been malfunctioning for the past three home games and it had a way of really dictating a lot about this game. The game officials had to frequently counsel Kilgore head coach Brian Hoberecht about the clock and its unpredictable nature.
A very good indicator of Seahawks prosperity arrived eight minutes into this one when Roy penetrated on a weave and dished out to Moore in the left corner. The 6-5 sophomore knocked home a three-pointer for a 15-8 Lamar State lead. Kilgore never got within five points the rest of the game.
Another telltale moment developed right before the half when Roy missed a jumper, but followed his own shot on a layup to give the Seabirds a 36-19 cushion. Kilgore never got closer than 10 after that.
Lamar State (18-5 and 10-2) will welcome all the support in Baytown that it can receive on Saturday night. The Seahawks visit Lee College that night at 7:30 p.m. - LU to honor Gilligan as distinguished alumnus
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