Thursday, November 29, 2012

Super Bowl Preview: The Final Step


If the Pioneers are able to take the final step and earn the first ever Lynnfield High state football championship, they are going to have to get past a determined Bishop Feehan squad that has been on a mission for a year.

On the floor of Gillette Stadium: (l to r) Andrew Kibarian, Alex Pascucci,
head coach Neal Weidman, Tyler Palumbo and Mike Karavetos
The Shamrocks, repeat champions of the Eastern Athletic Conference, made the playoffs last year but lost to Bourne 22-14 in the Tuesday game. Bourne went on to win the Division 3A Super Bowl by defeating a Hamilton Wenham team that lost Trevor Lyons to injury in the first half.

BF believes they were a better team than Bourne and has been stewing ever since. They have made 2012 their "redemption" season and are determined to claim the Super Bowl championship they feel they should have won last year.

The Shamrocks season followed a similar path as the Pioneers, losing two of their first three games and then reeling off eight straight wins including a blowout 49-7 win over Dighton-Rehoboth in the semi final last Tuesday night.

They have one obstacle left. And it's a big one in the form of the equally hot Pioneers.

The Pioneers and Shamrocks are both veteran teams with BF having 21 seniors to 17 for Lynnfield.

Both teams come in 9-2, undefeated in their respective leagues, both showing explosive offenses but dominating on the defensive side of the ball. The Shamrocks are allowing an average of only 6.5 points per game and have posted five shutouts. In their other wins, only one team has scored more than a touchdown.

The Pioneers come in allowing an average 9.8 points per game, but only 7.5 in their last six games.

Both offenses have been able to score with BF tallying 310 points (28.2 pga) while the Pioneers have scored 269 points (24.5 ppt).

Given that it will be a championship game at chilly Gillette Stadium, the bet is that this will turn into a defensive struggle, with the team making the most breaks coming away with the championship.

I asked Shamrocks head coach Curt Smith how he would describe his team to someone who has never seen them play.

"A total team," he said, issuing a refrain similar to that of the Pioneers. "We don't have just one superstar on our team. We're a group of kids who are hard working, blue collar kids that work hard together for one another."

I asked Smith if he has seen the Pioneers on film and what his impressions of them were.

"They look very big," Smith said. "Very physical and well coached. It's going to be a tough fight. I'd be very, very surprised if one team or the other has an easy time of it. This will be a battle and the best team will win."

Pioneer head coach Neal Weidman had a similar view of his Super Bowl opponent.

"They are very good," the coach said. "They are fast and aggressive all over the field. But at this point of the season, you're going to be playing a good team. That's just the way it is."

And they never stray from the message that winning this Saturday is their destiny.

"We're ready to capitalize," lineman Mitch Martin told David Carty of the Attleboro Sun Chronicle, "and go do what we're meant to do."

Been There, Done That
One place the Shamrocks may have an advantage is in big game experience.

Bishop Feehan has won 19 league championships and seven Super Bowls. Since 1994, they have played in 16 post season games, going 13-3 in those contests and have gone to nine Super Bowls, losing only twice. Their SB victims include familiar North Shore teams as Pentucket, Masco and Marblehead.

They have been in seven of the last 12 Super Bowls, winning six of them including five straight from 2000 to 2004.

"They've been here a lot," admitted Weidman. "They win their league a lot. Obviously there's a tradition there."

I asked Smith if it ever gets old.

"It doesn't get old," he replied. "It's exciting. Derek Jeter was asked once which of his baseball championships was his favorite and his answer is much the same as mine would be and that is the next one. But they're all special

"We're excited to be here," he went on. "This one is special for me since this is my second tour of duty here at Bishop Feehan. We're excited to have the opportunity to play a good football team for a state championship."

Running Offense
The Shamrocks potent offense relies mostly on the run. Quarterback Nick Romero has completed only 22 passes all year for 282 yards. That compares to Pioneer captain quarterback Mike Karavetsos who has connected on 66 passes for 856 yards.

BF began the season running out of a tight-split wing offense similar to North Reading, but have shifted to a power I with dangerous running back Matt Allen (1137 yards and 17 touchdowns) the primary weapon. Also getting carries is Isaiah Douglas (571 yards, 8 TD's) and fullback Matt Glebus (407 yards, 5 TD's) who is usually the up back in the Shamrock I.

That prolific backfield operates behind a powerful offensive line of center Seamus Cuddy (210 lbs), guards Connor Paine and Eric Beissner and two big 275 lb tackles in Chris Barthe and Mitch Martin and tight end Zach Forget.

Smith told the Sun Chronicle that the O line does nothing fancy, but just focuses on man blocking with little reliance on zone blocking.

"We block the guy in front of us, simple as it gets," Smith told the Sun Chronicle

Or as Martin explained to Carty, "We do a lot of work staying low and driving. Just being tougher than the other guy."

Defense the Calling Card
Despite the high scoring offense, the Shamrocks are even more impressive on the defensive side of the ball where they have stifled their opposition. Smith explains his defense as a 4-2-5. The BF front four of Forget, Barthe, Cuddy and Martin plays in front of an athletic linebacking corps of Glebus, Desmond Cornetta, Tom Salmon, Matt Pisano and Mike Agnello with Douglas and Allen at defensive back.

The defense focuses on stopping the run then forcing the opposition to pass. The strategy has worked as the BF defense has smothered opposing passing games, holding them to 30% completion and picking off 12 interceptions. Smith uses combination coverages of both man and zone.

I asked him for the key to the great success of his defense and Smith replied, "Eleven men to the ball. That's our motto. We get people to the ball. We rally to the football. How we get to the ball is something we're very proud of."

Breakfast of Champions
I was able to attend the Super Bowl Breakfast of Champions at Gillette Stadium this morning held in the Putnam Club overlooking the field. Pretty heady stuff.

Prime Time Pioneers get interviewed for the Big Game
The first thing that Peter Smith, MIAA assistant director and emcee for the breakfast noted was how exclusive a group it was. He said that 300 MIAA teams started the season and only 74 played after Thanksgiving. That became 38 after the playoff games Tuesday and only 12 were playing at Gillette.

Attending from the Pioneers were principal Bob Cleary, Weidman, Athletic Director Sean Roach and captains Andrew Kibarian, D. J. DeGeorge, Alex Pascucci, Mike Karavetsos and Tyler Palumbo.

The breakfast was held to disseminate much of the logistical information which is immense considering there will be six games played in one day at Gillette.

Fans attending the game can enter through any of the stadium entrances and should then proceed to the Patriot Place Plaza, where the ticket office is located. Once inside the office, stadium personnel will direct you to the Lynnfield section of the stands behind the Pioneer bench.

They also stressed that the game will start EXACTLY 15 minutes after game five is completed, so if the games run fast, the Pioneers could kick off earlier than 8 pm, so it would be wise to get there early just in case.

The other key event of the day was the coin flips to determine the home team for the four eastern mass games. (The home teams for the two western games are predetermined by power ratings.) The flip for the first three games all game up tails, so when the Pioneer captains went up for their flip, they called tails. Unfortunately, it came up heads, so Lynnfield will be the visiting team wearing white and will be on the East sideline.

One of the perks of playing the final game of the day is that the Awards Ceremony will be held on the Gillette Stadium field following the game. All other ceremonies will be held on a stage set up in the stadium concourse.

The highlight of the breakfast was the appearance of two guest speakers, the first of which was unscheduled. But when you own the place, you don't need to be scheduled.

Patriots' owner Robert Kraft made a surprise visit and spoke to the captains, coaches and administrators for a few minutes, stressing that he always wanted to hold the high school Super Bowls at the stadium but he couldn't do it until fieldturf was installed in 2006.

He told the players to "cherish and enjoy this special time of your lives."

He also reminded them that the winning team gets to have a jersey hanging in The Hall at Patriot Place for a year and will also be listed in the Hall for ever.

The main speaker was East Boston's own Jermaine Wiggins, former Patriot Super Bowl winner and current talk show host on 98.5 The Sports Hub. He will be doing color commentary along side play-by-play man Dan Roche on the coverage of the game on TV38.

Wiggy, D. J. and Tyler discuss the Super Bowl
Wiggy told the group that he never got to play in a high school Super Bowl. He also stressed the importance of the high school coaches and their effect on players' lives.

He said high school coaches "were far more important than any coaches you'll have in college or the pros."

He also said that "the opportunity to play on this field is something you'll never forget."

He then talked about the importance of a college degree. "I have a Super Bowl ring, but I'm more proud of my college degree. Not many can play in the NFL, but everyone here can get a degree."

He concluded by reminding everyone that they were "part of the same brotherhood. You play the same game, bleed the same color blood and sweat the same sweat" and that regardless of the outcome of the game, they should "win or lose with pride."

The group then got to tour the stadium complex including a visit to the Dana Farber Fieldhouse where the teams will warm up prior to the game. The tour concluded on the floor of Gillette Stadium where players and coaches could soak in the atmosphere and were made available for print and electronic interviews.

"This has been a great experience," Weidman said following the event. "The MIAA's done a great job. The fact that the Patriots do this is unbelievable."

That's it for now. Check back Saturday night (late!) for my first take on the big game.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Amesbury Playoff Leftovers


As the visiting team, Amesbury was introduced first last night at Cawley Stadium. The team formed two lines and the Indian seniors were announced as they ran the gauntlet to the 50 yard line. It was a nice touch especially for this group of Amesbury seniors which include head coach Thom Connnors' son Tommy.

The senior Connors has spoken many times this year about how special this group of seniors is to him, understandably since he watched them grow up and coached them through the ranks. It was a perfectly acceptable and appropriate way for the Indians to be introduced.

Pioneers are introduced as a team before the playoff game
But as it was happening, I just knew the Pioneers would not be following suit.

Sure enough, the Pioneers formed one long line from sideline to sideline with captains D. J. DeGeorge, Tyler Palumbo, Mike Karavetsos, Alex Pascucci and Andrew Kibarian out front. As they marched as a unit to the 50 yard line, the PA system boomed that the Pioneers had elected to be introduced as a team.

Also an appropriate and acceptable gesture. And one that is also understandable if you have ever spoken to head coach Neal Weidman or participated in one of his post game press conferences.

Weidman turns almost Belichickean when asked to comment on individual performances. If you ask about a great performance from a Pioneer running back, he will talk about the offensive line. If you try to get a comment on an interception or two, he will tell you that a defensive lineman was probably in the quarterback's face. He is all about "team" and it has obviously taken root with his champion Pioneers and is also one of the reasons this team has made it as far as it has.

The team gets its attitude and fundamental principles from its head coach and coaching staff. The 2012 Champion Pioneers get the message.

It's all about team.

Stifling Defense
The Pioneer defense has been stingy all year and has gotten even better as the season has gone on. But the ruthless way they dismantled a high-powered Amesbury offense was truly impressive.

Lynnfield had 14 points on the board before the Indians had their initial first down. It was obvious from the start that the Pioneers were keying on quarterback Matt Talbot, the triggerman for the Indian offense. As is the case when facing Trevor Lyons of Hamilton-Wenham, job one is containing a dangerous and athletic signal caller who can run, pass and many times make something out of nothing. That is Matt Talbot.

Against the Pioneers, he was never able to do much of anything. The Indians couldn't run and as has been the pattern with most Lynnfield opponents this year, when the run is stopped they go to the air. When that happens, passes start finding defensive Pioneers. Such was the case again last night as the Lynnfield defense picked off three more passes (two by Matt Kramich and one by Anthony Costa).

That give the Pioneers 19 interceptions on the season or an average of nearly two per game.

"Four turnovers was huge," Weidman said. "Mistakes and turnovers go into that category and we did a good job of forcing those turnovers. It's tough to win when you turn the ball over. You only get so many possessions especially with ten minute quarters where the possessions are even fewer."

Another key part of smothering the Amesbury offense was keeping them off the field and the Pioneer offense did its part there.

"We knew going into it that our goal would have to be to keep their offense off the field and I think we did that pretty well," said Weidman.

That was particularly the case early in the game when Lynnfield set the tone. While the defense was forcing three and outs on the first two Amesbury possessions, the Pioneer offense was reeling off  17 plays, seven first downs and two touchdowns in amassing a 14-0 lead.

"Obviously defensively getting three and outs and being able to hold the ball at times picking up a lot of first downs helped," Weidman said.

Early Sign
One of the first signals that this would be a good night for the Pioneers came on the coin toss. Lynnfield won and elected to defer, which is their custom. They capitalized on the decision by scoring on the opening drive of the second half and taking a 21-7 lead that the Indians could never overcome.

Jump Start
That quick two TD lead jump started the Pioneer effort.

"That was huge," Weidman said of the two first quarter scores. "When they scored to make it 14-7 it was obviously touch and go. We knew we had the ball coming out for the second half. To be able to get down the field and have a good drive there and put a little distance between us was big. I think the kids were really able to settle in and go forward from that point."

Two Way Man
Speaking of Kramich, the junior had a standout game on both sides of the ball. The two interceptions and fumble recovery were huge, but he also made a key play on offense.

Matt Kramich picks up big yardage on a kickoff return
On the Pioneers' opening drive of the second half, Lynnfield moved nicely down the field but nearly stalled at the Indian 18 yard line. Faced with a fourth and eight, Karavetsos drilled a pass to Kramich at the ten yard line and he pulled it in with Connors all over him. He drove forward to the six yard line for the first down. Two plays later Kyle McGah cruised in for the score to make it 21-7.

If Karavetsos and Kramich don't complete that hookup, Amesbury takes over on their own 18, down only one score and it could have been a very different game.

Fool Me Twice
Weidman and the Pioneers dug deep into their bag of tricks on the their final scoring drive pulling out a successful fake punt. Facing a fourth and seven from their own 42, the Pioneers lined up in punt formation, but the snap went directly to the up man Alex Roper who calmly tossed one to Palumbo over the middle who motored 40 yards for a first down to the Amesbury 18. Four McGah runs later, the Pioneers scored their fifth touchdown of the night to go up 35-7 and end any feeble comeback hopes the Indians might have had.

It was the second season in a row the Pioneers used the play. Last year against Pentucket, Lynnfield was tied 14-14 facing a fourth and five from their own 35 midway in the fourth quarter. The same play was called and again Roper hit Palumbo, this time for 15 yards and a first down. On the next play, Karavetsos found Steve Yobaccio down the left sideline with a 50 yard bomb for the eventual winning score in a 21-14 win.

Making His Point
Speaking of Roper, the senior continues to bang through his extra points, connecting on 5 of 5 again last night. It's the third time this year he has pulled off that trick. In the two biggest games of the year against North Reading and Amesbury, Roper is 7 for 7.

That gives Roper 50 PAT's for his career, second only to Steve Ullian's 75 and 14 more than third place David Frontero who booted 36 in 1986-87. Roper now has 29 this season, third behind Ullian's 34 in 2010 and 30 in 2009.

Climbing the Charts
While we are talking records, McGah's four TD's gives him 17 on the season which ties the LHS record for most rushing touchdowns in a single season with Eric Hansen who did it in 1978. The junior also now has 102 points on the season, only the third Pioneer to break the 100 point mark for the season since Hansen in 1978 who tops the single season scoring list with 128. Frank Berardino is in second place with his 120 points scored in 1960.

McGah now has 138 career points, placing him in 8th place on the all time Pioneer scoring list.

Joining the Century Club
McGah joined the 100 career point club earlier this season, and Karavetsos entered that elite group last night when his TD run lifted him to an even 100 points for his career. That is good enough for 13th on the all time LHS scoring list.

Pioneer coaches celebrate win over Amesbury
Another Step
Last night was the third post season appearance for Lynnfield High football and it's first win. This will be the Pioneers' second trip to the Super Bowl. The first appearance in 1986 resulted in a 19-0 loss to Lincoln Sudbury. It would be 23 years until the Pioneers played after Thanksgiving again. In 2009, Lynnfield fell to Austin Prep 22-20 in overtime in the Division 3A playoffs.

That's it for now. Check back tomorrow night for my preview of the Super Bowl.



Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Super Tuesday

In one of the most impressive performances I have ever seen from a Lynnfield squad, the Pioneers overpowered Amesbury 35-14 tonight to earn a trip to Gillette Stadium Saturday night.

You can get all the stats and details in my game story in the Villager which will be out late tomorrow. For those who braved the persistent drizzle, you saw the Pioneers take apart a VERY good Amesbury team. The Pioneers were just that much better.

And you can bet the Indians have seen just about enough of the Pioneers in general and Kyle McGah in particular. The junior scored four more TD's giving him eight against Amesbury for the season.

Also, kudos to Matt Kramich, who was a one man turnover machine, picking off two interceptions and recovering a fumble. Anthony Costa picked off the fourth Amesbury turnover.

Next up is Bishop Feehan in what is shaping up to be a defensive battle. The Shamrocks have allowed only 53 points all season and have posted five shutdowns. With the Pioneer defense playing as well as it has, there may not be a lot of points being scored at Gillette on Saturday night.

I don't know much about BF, but looking at their roster, it appears that the Pioneers will have a significant size advantage. The Shamrocks list only three linemen over 200 lbs - one at 208, one at 6'4" 276 and an end at 5'9, 235. But if their defense is as good as it looks, then they must have some hellacious speed and hitting ability.

Check back later in the week for more on the Amesbury game and a preview of the Super Bowl.


Monday, November 26, 2012

Amesbury Playoff Preview: Take Two


For the first time in the 55 year history of the LHS football program, the Pioneers will play an opponent for the second time in the same season when they face Amesbury for the right to go to Gillette Stadium on Saturday and play in the EMass Division 3A Super Bowl.

This will be the second trip to the post season for the Pioneers in four years. In 2009, the Pioneers took on the Austin Prep Cougars and came up a yard and a half short in Reading, falling 26-20 in overtime. The Pioneers will be hoping to take the next step this time.

The two foes that square off at Cawley Stadium in Lowell at 5:15 pm on Tuesday night are very familiar with each other. They have faced each other every year since Lynnfield joined the CAL in 1973. The Pioneers hold a 24-15-1 edge in the series and have won four straight, although every one required a dramatic comeback by the Pioneers to escape with the win.

For my post on the recent history of these Lynnfield/Amesbury nailbiters click here. This year's game, played in September, added another chapter to the cliffhanger-like series. Three turnovers dumped the Pioneers into an early 21-0 hole. They climbed back to 21-12 at the half, then fell behind 27-12 in the third period. But Kyle McGah's scored three second half TD's to lift the Pioneers to a dramatic 31-27 win.

Similar Paths
The Pioneers and Indians followed similar arcs after that game. They both played their worst game of the year the following week to drop to 1-2 on the season. The Pioneers played their poorest game of the season in a 14-7 loss to Bishop Fenwich while Amesbury was dominated by North Reading 21-7.

That was the low point of the season for both squads. Neither has lost since.

The Pioneers rattled off seven straight wins including a perfect 5-0 league mark, outscoring their opponents 190-46 in that stretch. The Indians won eight straight including a spotless 5-0 CAL/NEC 3 record of their own, outscoring those foes 235-119.

The Pioneers have done it with a smothering defense that has held opponents to and average of 6.5 points per game during the win streak. The Indians unleashed an overpowering offense during their last eight wins, averaging 29.3 points per game.

Not to be redundant, but as in the North Reading game, something's got to give.

"They're hot, there's no doubt about that," said Pioneer head coach Neal Weidman. "They've been playing great. Ever since we've played them they've been fantastic. They have a long winning streak going and they've been scoring a ton of points. We're happy to be there to play them."

Amesbury earned its ticket to the playoffs with a hard fought 13-10 win over Newburyport on the foot of Mac Short who nailed two field goals. The Indian defense shut down Newburyport, while producing enough offense to win.

Something Looks Familiar
In trying to think of the best way to describe the Indians, I keep coming up with the 2011 Hamilton Wenham Generals. They have Matt Talbot at quarterback who like the Generals' Trevor Lyons is dangerous both as a runner and a passer. He has rushed for 10 touchdowns and is Amesbury's leading scorer with 66 points. Talbot has also thrown for 15 scores which ties him for second in Division 3A.In the earlier meeting with the Pioneers, Talbot ran for 124 yards and a score and was 10 of 20 for 168 yards and a TD.

Continuing the H-W analogy, playing the part of last year's bruising General running back Elliot Burr is  rough and tumble Perry Mroz. Mroz has scored eight touchdowns and is second in scoring for the Indians with 50 points.

And where the Generals had a flock of good receivers in Matt Putur, Pete Duval and Luke Wendt, this year's Indian squad has Thom Connors (5 TD catches), Devlin Gobeil (3 TD's), Pat Scanlon (3 TD's) and Shawn Bannon (3 TD's).

The only real difference between 2011 H-W and 2012 Amesbury is that the Generals ran from the spread and pro set while the Indians line up in a modified Wing T. But the personnel is eerily similar and equally dangerous.

Comparing the Teams
When trying to compare Lynnfield and Amesbury, one measuring stick are the results against seven common opponents. Both teams played H-W, North Reading, Ipswich, Manchester Essex, Georgetown, Pentucket and Newburyport.

Amesbury went 6-1 against those teams outscoring them 184-108. Their only loss was to North Reading. The Indians allowed double digit points to all of them except M/E who they held to 7 points.

The Pioneers also went 6-1 against that group, outscoring them 175-47. Their only loss was the one point defeat to Newburyport. The Pioneers shut out Georgetown while holding four others to one score. Only Hamilton Wenham (14) and M/E (13) scored more than once against Lynnfield.

Fittingly, the only team to score more than twice against the Pioneers was Amesbury, whose 27 points is the most anyone has scored against them this season and represents almost 30% of the points scored on the Pioneer defense all year.

The Pioneers' 31 points against Amesbury is also the most the Indians have allowed all year.

Effective Spread
Most big games come down to defense, but it's hard to see either team shutting down the other with the weapons they both employ. Amesbury was able to shut down Newburyport, but there was an interesting subplot in that game.


The Clippers ran two thirds of their plays against Amesbury out of a pro set offense with Connor Wile under center. They averaged about 4 yards per carry rushing out of that formation. They ran about a third of their plays out of the Pioneer-like spread with Colton Fontaine taking the snaps and averaged almost 7 yards per carry against Amesbury out of that set. The Indians seemed to have more trouble with the pull and go play that is a staple of the Lynnfield offense operated by captain quarterback Mike Karavetsos and McGah.

In the first game, the Indians clearly keyed on Karavetsos, limiting him to 52 yards, but McGah ran wild for 148 yards and four touchdowns.

The game will come down to which defense can slow down the other's offense. The Indians have scored 317 points on the year while the Pioneers have scored 234. That's a lot of offense to try and contain.

The other key factor is that both teams have outstanding coaches in Weidman for the Pioneers and Thom Connors for Amesbury. Those two will be playing chess on the sidelines while the boys are battling it out on the field.

"When it comes to this time of the year, you are going to be playing a good team," said Weidman. "It comes down to who plays well and who gets the breaks."

Final Word
So where does that leave us.

Click here for a preview from the Newburyport News and here for a preview from the Boston Herald.

For my final word on the subject, I called on a couple of objective third parties in North Reading offensive coordinator Ed Melanson (an appreciated and valuable contributor to the blog all season) and Triton head coach Pat Sheehan (as objective as a former Pioneer captain and offensive coordinator could be).

"This game is very interesting," said Sheehan, whose young Viking squad fell to the Indians 42-13 in October. "I think Amesbury has the edge in skill while Lynnfield is definitely stronger up front. Both teams are considerably better than they were when they played early in the year so that game should have no bearing except for the fact that it is extremely difficult to beat a good football team once. Lynnfield now has to beat them twice. Hamilton-Wenham did it to Newburyport last year though.

"Amesbury is very difficult to defend, (more so than any team we faced this year)," Sheehan went on. "They run so many different plays and do it all well. They throw the ball vertically, in the underneath zones and screen well. They run the ball very well and have many different weapons. Gobeil may be the best receiver in the league and Talbot is getting my vote for Tier 3 Player of the year. I think that the tough Thanksgiving matchups for both teams was good for the game as well, as neither team's last game was an easy one and they had to work for them."

"We played Amesbury very early in the season, as did Lynnfield," Melanson said. "Amesbury has some really nice weapons, #7 Talbot at quarterback is very quick and throws well, #31 Mroz is a big fullback and middle linebacker, #12 Gobeil is an excellent receiver along with the coaches son #2 Connors who is a back/receiver. They have a big line and really spread the field very well."

"They have been on a roll for a while and even when things are tough they manage to pull out the win," Melanson went on. "Like Lynnfield they are senior loaded. I believe where they are suspect is on the other side of the ball where they have given up close to twice the number of points that Lynnfield has. I'm by no means saying they are a bad defensive team, I just wouldn't put them on par with Lynnfield.

"I think at the point of the season Amesbury and Lynnfield played the Pioneers were still figuring things out and after the Bishop Fenwick game really settled down, focused and have gotten better each week," he went on. "I think it should be another great game but I think Lynnfield is a better team. May not be as flashy but it's playoff time and defense is what wins, not flash. I would put Lynnfield and Newburyport's defenses on the same level but Lynnfield has a better offense right now and should be able to throw up a few touchdowns and keep Amesbury in check."

The forecast as of 4:45 pm Monday calls for light snow showers mid day Tuesday ending by around game time. Hopefully that is the case. You hate to have a game of this magnitude affected by the weather, but both teams have to play in it regardless.

All that's left is to play the game.

That's it for now. Check back after the game for some of my initial thoughts on the game.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

North Reading Leftovers


Surrounded by a bevy of reporters after Thursday's game, Pioneer head coach Neal Weidman was asked what the difference was in the Lynnfield victory over the Hornets.

The coach hesitated for a second, glanced over to the scoreboard and replied: "Oh I don't know. Seven points?"

The line got a chuckle from the ink stained wretches but the statement was true.

Head Coach Neal Weidman takes a Gatorade bath
"Seriously it could have gone either way," Weidman went on. "On our second touchdown drive we busted a long run. It could have been them that busted a long run. We got that one big play that set us up for a touchdown but it could have very easily been them doing it too."

All true and the Lynnfield fans that packed Pioneer Field could never relax and the many North Reading fans never had to give up hope.

Yes, this was a great game between two evenly matched teams that resulted in a one score win by the Pioneers. And yes, with the explosive Hornet offense, they were always one Carl Lipani or C. J. McCarthy TD sprint away from tying it up.

But.....

If you look at the final numbers, they show that the Pioneers really had the upper hand for most of the day.

Start with the top level numbers.

The Pioneers rolled for 319 yards. The Hornets were held to 145, only 40 in the second half. That was their third lowest output of the year. Only Ipswich (118) and Newburyport (140) held them to fewer yards.

The Hornets gained 59 yards and earned four first downs on their lone scoring drive. They managed 86 yards and four first downs the rest of the game.

The first down edge went to the Pioneers 13-8.

Lynnfield made it into North Reading territory six of their nine possessions, scoring twice and reaching the NR 18, 37, 25 and 13. They never had a three and out.

The Hornets made it into Lynnfield territory on only three of their eight possessions, scoring once and reaching the Pioneer 47 and 30. They had four three and outs.

The Pioneers averaged 6.1 yards per play. The Hornets managed only 3.4 yards per play.

North Reading had only two plays of over ten yards and six plays over five yards compared to 10 over ten yards and 18 over five yards for Lynnfield

The Pioneers were 5/8 on third down and 0/2 on fourth down for a combined 5/10 (50%). The Hornets were 3/10 on third down and 1/3 on fourth down for a combined 4/13 (30%).

Most of those stats are reinforced by the teams' opening two possessions. The Pioneers ran 18 plays for 107 yards, five first downs and a touchdown. The Hornets ran six plays for 11 yards and no first downs.

Now all that said, what I have just outlined reinforces the old adage that there are lies, damned lies and statistics. Because anyone that was at the field Thursday morning knows that this was a nip and tuck game that was going to be decided by a few key plays. The Pioneers happened to make them but they could easily have been made by the Hornets as well.

Bottom line is that the game lived up to its billing, something that is rarely the case.

And the best part was that the teams played a hard hitting football game that decided the outcome. There was one fumble by each team (the Pioneers recovered by Lipani and the Hornets' covered by Connor Lordan) within five plays of each other that basically cancelled each other out. There was one Cam Rondeau interception that helped seal the win at the end. And there were only three penalties called all game, one on a kickoff and one at the very end when the Pioneers were running out the clock.

The players decided it between the whistles.

"I thought it was a really well played game," North Reading offensive coordinator Ed Melanson told me. "The refs did a fantastic job of staying out of it and letting the boys play. It was hard hitting and fast moving game and except for the final score I couldn't have asked for anything else."

"We couldn't have asked for anything better," Weidman said. "It was a beautiful day and really the teams had a chance to decide it. Great atmosphere. Really fun. Of course it's really easy for me to say now, but it was fun."

Then and Now
Lipani is one of the best backs the Hornets have ever had and proved he was one of the best on the North Shore for the past two years. But the difference in his numbers against Lynnfield from last year to this year is a pretty big indicator of the final outcome.

Last year, the classy back torched the Pioneers for 217 yards and four touchdowns and a two point conversion on 40 carries for a 5.4 yard per carry average. This year he was "held" to 101 yards and one touchdown on 29 carries for a 3.5 ypc average.

"Holding (Lipani) to (101) yards is an unbelievable task for any defense with what they do," Weidman said. "We felt good about the fact that our defense would at least play well."

Running It Up
Because I had to take photos for my Villager article, I needed to be on the North Reading sideline so as not to shoot into the sun. That gave me the opportunity to listen to the comments of the Hornet fans as they rooted their team on.

As junior running back Kyle McGah kept pounding through the North Reading defense on the final clock-killing drive, one Hornet fan said with obvious admiration, "That kid is tough."

I couldn't have said it better myself.

It's not that he gained 112 yards in the game, the fifth time he has cracked the century yard mark in ten games this year, but the way in which he gets them. As Kevin Doyle of the Daily Item pointed out to Weidman in the post game interview, we need to start counting yards after hit for the way McGah continues to gain yards after initial contact.

"He gets it done," said Weidman. "The line does a great job blocking for him but you can't always block everybody and he picks up the rest on his own. He does a good job. He's got that low center of gravity and he's big from the waist down which is good for a running back."

McGah now sits at 972 yards on the year, which is second best for a single season since I've been keeping stats which goes back to 1989. He'll need a really big game against Amesbury Tuesday night to reach Dan Veinot who rushed for 1363 yards in 2000.

McGah's TD now gives him 114 career points and moves him past Todd Coviello (110 points, 1985-86) and Bruce Rothman (112 points, 1969-70) into ninth place on the all time Pioneer scoring list.

Catching Up
Junior Matt Kramich had a big day on Thanksgiving, hauling in three more passes for 49 yards giving him 22 catches for 322 yards for the year. Two of his three catches were third down receptions for first downs.

More Picks
Sophomore Cam Rondeau picked off his fourth interception of the year, tying him with captain Tyler Palumbo for the team lead. The Pioneers now have 16 picks for the season, surpassing the 14 by the 2010 team which is the most in the past ten years.

Third Time the Charm
The Pioneer win snaps a two game losing streak in championship games between the two rivals. The Hornets took the 1978 and 1980 games in Lynnfield when a title was on the line for both teams.

Battle Tested
Weidman has been looking to toughen up the Pioneers in recent years with a strong non-league schedule and it certainly was the case this year. The combined record of the five non league Lynnfield opponents was 34-21. Newburyport (6-5), Amesbury (9-2), Pentucket (6-5) and Bishop Fenwick (8-3) all had winning records and Danvers had the only losing record at 5-6. The Pioneers went 3-2 in non league play.

Nice Touch
Tom Waisnor, Voice of the Pioneers, had a classy finish at the end of Thursday's game by announcing the names of the seniors for both teams as they left the field.

They'll Be Back
To paraphrase the Terminator, the Hornets will be back. And with a vengeance next season. North Reading graduates only 10 seniors including Lipani, but they get most of their starters back.

"With Carl gone it's a huge whole to fill but CJ (McCarthy) (#30) is ready to step in," said Melanson. "We also return five of our front seven, we lose (John) Fortes (#77) at tackle and (Mike) Jannino (#85) at tight end but everyone else is back. We also return half our backfield with our blocking back, (Mike) Cresta (#21) and of course CJ . On defense I believe coach (Jeff Wall) said we have eight starters returning and some more kids that have contributed so hopefully there shouldn't be too much of a drop over there. I hope our kids use this tough lose as motivation and move forward, I believe they will."

Party Like It's 2009
In the post game celebration, I sidled up to volunteer assistant coach Jeff Gannon who was a captain on the 2010 team and a junior on the 2009 championship team. I asked him to compare the two title teams.

"It's different years," Gannon said. "The 2009 team did their thing and I was part of that. It was a great year this year and I'm so proud of these guys to watch them grow and become the players they are today. And to see them come from week one all the way to now and champions on the last day and their last time on their home field is unbelievable. Let's go get that Superbowl."

Senior Sendoff
As has become the team's custom, the team all joined hands and spread across the field and walked from endzone to endzone. For the seniors, it was the last time they would do that as Pioneer football players.

Weidman talked about the seniors moving on.

"A parent said to me 'I don't want it to end. I've had such a good time. The kid's a senior and we appreciate everything you've done' which was great to hear," Weidman said. "I told her how do you think I feel. I have to go through it every single year. I have to lose a bunch of kids that were with me for four years. Every senior class is different in their own way. Some times you have better football players in a senior class but I have a ton of respect for any player that plays for four years, sticks it out, practices six days a week. When you start the season it's a hundred degrees and when you finish the season it's twenty. So every year you have respect for all those seniors that will leave."

That's it for now. Check back Monday night for my Amesbury playoff preview post.


Thursday, November 22, 2012

Championship Feast!


The turkey will taste great today as the Pioneers captured their second league championship in four years 14-7 in an outstanding high school football game at Pioneer Field.

Both teams played strong, disciplined football, but the Pioneers made the keys plays in the second half to take a lead and hold off a valiant NR squad.

Congrats to head Coach Neal Weidman and his staff and kudos to NR head coach Jeff Wall and Offensive Coordinator Ed Melanson on a great 8-2 season.

Now on to the playoffs Tuesday night in Reading at 5:15 in a rematch with the Amesbury Fighting Indians.

Check back in the next few days and I"ll have more on the NR game in my Leftovers post.

Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

North Reading Game Preview: Winner Take All


In 1978, eight year old Jeff Wall, future North Reading football coach "was probably at home playing with his army men," according to the coach. Future Lynnfield head coach Neal Weidman's three year old self "wasn't doing much."

Neither was aware what was happening on Thankgiving morning that year, when the Pioneers and Hornets engaged in a winner-take-all CAL Championship game at Pioneer Field. That monumental game played 34 years ago was the last time the archrivals squared off with a guarantee that one of them would leave the field with the title.

It was the Hornets who prevailed 21-8 to capture their first ever CAL title. In 1979, the Hornets came into the game with the league crown already sewed up and was playing for a trip to the Division Three Superbowl, which they earned with a 13-6 win. In 1980, the two teams returned to Lynnfield and again they both had a shot at the title. But this time, the Pioneers needed help to take the crown while the Hornets only needed to beat Lynnfield. North Reading won a 7-6 squeaker in the final seconds to win their third straight CAL Championship. They haven't won another since.

In this week's Villager, I take a look at the 1978 and 1980 games along with my pregame preview article of this year's big game along with two pages of stats for both teams. You should definitely check that out

Championship Banners

The Pioneers couldn't beat those juggernaut Hornets of the late '70's, but they still managed to raise title banners of their own. Lynnfield captured Dual County championships in 1960, 1961 and 1962 and took a piece of the crown in their inaugural CAL season of 1973 (check out my season long review of that year in my Wayback Wednesday posts).

After the NR losses, the Pioneers bounced back for CAL Titles in 1983, 1985 and 1986 (including a trip to the Superbowl) and most recently in 2009.

But Thursday morning, it will be back to 1978 for the arch rivals when the CAL/NEC 4 Title and a trip to the Division 3A playoffs against the winner of the Amesbury/Newburyport game will be on the line.

One team will go home a champion. The other will go home disappointed.

Formidable Foes

Weidman and Wall were nowhere near Lynnfield in 1978, but there is no question where they will be on Thanksgiving morning: on opposite sidelines playing a high level game of football chess trying to outwit each other to capture the crown.

They each have their work cut out for them.

Weidman has to figure out a way to stop Carl Lipani, C. J. McCarthy and the Hornets' steamrolling single wing steamroller while attempting to score points against an aggressive North Reading defense that has allowed one touchdown or less in five of their nine games.

Wall meanwhile has to defend a multi-faceted Pioneer attack that can inflict damage on the ground with Kyle McGah and captain quarterback Mike Karavetsos or with an efficient pass game with Karavetsos throwing to captain Alex Pascucci and Matt Kramich, A. J. Gallo and Tony Mancini.

He also has to hope that his run-heavy offense, which has attempted only 13 passes all season completing three, one for a touchdown, can penetrate the imposing Pioneer front seven led by captains Andrew Kibarian and D. J. DeGeorge in the line and captain linebacker Tyler Palumbo.

There is no question the teams are as evenly matched as they can be, so what eventually will turn the tide?

Wall certainly has a great deal of respect for the Pioneers and knows what he faces Thursday morning.

"You can't really pick your poison," the NR coach says of Lynnfield. "If you stop the run, they're going to pass and if you stop pass, they're going to run. They spread you out and then run you. You have to pick which one you want to try to stop. But then they can hurt you with the other.

"One of the things about their offense," Wall continued "Is how explosive they are. Against Georgetown they scored the first two times they touched the ball. They're never out of a game where we would have a little trouble catching up. We try to grind it out with a slow paced offense so if we fall behind, we're in trouble. We're hoping not to get into that situation.

"At least with our line this year we have a little bit of size," Wall said, acknowledging the size advantage the Pioneers enjoy. "But they are just huge. I don't know what they are putting in the water in Lynnfield, but we're going to have to pipe some over here."

Wall also spoke about his team's "all-in" philosophy on the run game.

"The fear is that everyone says we're one dimensional," Wall said. "We've thrown the ball 13 times all year, so I guess we're a little one dimensional."

Can The Wing Be Stopped?

I asked him if there was a way to stop the Hornet offense if they were executing properly.

"If you're disciplined and you're big up front and you have linebackers flying around, it's very difficult for us to get going. It comes down to footing as well. At Georgetown (14-0 NR win), we didn't have our footing and we struggled the entire game. We feel better playing at home on turf. We're hoping Lynnfield's field is holding up this week."

With above average temperatures this week and no storms in sight, the field shouldn't be an issue although a freeze Wednesday night followed by a thaw during the game could make things a little messy.

North Reading offensive coordinator Ed Melanson, the architect of the single wing offense is certainly concerned about the Pioneers.

"Lynnfield is big, talented, senior loaded and on a roll," Melanson said.

But can they stop the wing?

"Heck yes they can stop us," Melanson said. "They stopped everyone else. Even the two games they lost were awful tight and low scoring."

And it's not like the Hornet offense has never run into trouble. Ipswich held Lipani to 63 yards and no points and nearly upset North Reading in last week's 15-13 Hornet win. I asked Wall what the Tigers were doing that was so effective.

"We were dissapointed in the way we played," Wall said. "But credit Ipswich. They came out and said they were going to stop the run and they did. They're better than a two win team. They're very aggressive on defense and they were in most of their games on teams that ran the ball. They struggled with teams that threw the ball. Unfortunately, we only put one or two passes up.

"At some point they took their corners out and put more linebackers on the field," Wall said in explaining the Ipswich strategy for stopping the wing. "They had 11 guys within three or four yards of the ball. It's tough to run on that."

I asked Melanson if he thought the Pioneer coaching staff would use the Ipswich game as a blueprint to stop the Hornets.

"I don't think they will put a whole lot of stock in that one game," he replied. "Don't get me wrong Ipswich played very well but our kids were looking past them and we came out flat, etc. The Ipswich defense is not the Lynnfield defense and I can't see Coach Weidman just copying another teams' defense. He's too good of a coach and I'm not that lucky.

"It would be like us copying what Bishop Fenwick did against Lynnfield," Melanson went on.  "Two different teams, players and philosophies. It's a lot like teams that tried to copy the way Newburyport played us early on and it hurt them."

So then how will the Pioneers play the wing?

"I don't think they'll tell me," Melanson responded. "I expect them to do what they have done all year, if it ain't broke don't fix it. They have a huge line and their linebackers are nasty and their defensive backs are just as good. I don't see a weakness over there."

Weidman didn't put a lot of stock in the Ipswich game either.

"I think there was definitely some sort of a chance that (North Reading) was looking ahead," the coach replied. "Knowing that it wasn't a super meaningful game for them and that it was all coming down to the Thanksgiving game. I really didn't matter what was going to happen in that game. They're still going to give their best effort on Thanksgiving."

Keys to Victory

So what does Weidman see as the keys to a Pioneer win?

"The kids know what it's all about," the coach said. "They're excited to play. They just have to realize that all they can do is do what they've been coached to do and play as hard as they can."

"We have to come out and hopefully execute and play well," Wall responded when asked what the Hornets have to do to win. "If we do get opportunities, we can't waste them. If we get a turnover we've got to capitalize on it every time. And we've got to take time off the clock. When we have the ball, we have to keep their offense off the field and hopefully we'll be alright."

Both coaches agreed that the two rivals playing for the title was a special event.

"They've struggled and we've struggled and the idea of both of us doing very well in a season seemed like a pipe dream," Wall said. "We told the kids it's been 32 years since this has really meant something. We told them to enjoy it, but to stay focused. We'll have plenty of time to look back on it later, but we don't want to have regrets. They're taking it in stride. I don't think they fully get the magnitude of it yet."

"It's exciting for the kids and coaches," Weidman said. "We had the Rotary Luncheon and talked a lot about the fact that it will be exciting for the kids to have that experience."

"I was hoping this would be our year," Wall summed up. "But we can't catch a break. We're kind of up but can't catch it when they're down. But it's great. If anything I respect Lynnfield. I respect Neal a ton for what he's been able to do over there. He does a great job as well as the other coaches. I've seen a lot of their games this year and I'm amazed at how well disciplined they are and they bring it every game. That's a credit to Neal. If we can't win it, I hope it would be them."

Stellar Coaching

Speaking of coaches, I've been covering high school football for 36 years and I can't emphasize enough how crucial and what an impact coaching has at this level. I've had the fortune to watch many good coaches and coaching staffs in action, and this years' Pioneer staff of Weidman, John O'Brien, Jon DeMarco, Gino Fodera, Chris Sakelakos, Fern Lavoie, Peter Marinelli, Vincent Calderone, Jeff Gannon and John Bossi is as good as any I've seen. They have the players buying in and in terms of strategy and tactics, they have the players in the right position to make plays nearly every game. That is what a winning program is all about - kids that play hard and coaches who put them in a position to win. Check on both accounts.

"I've been really lucky," Weidman said. "We had some really good coaches and we replaced them with some other real good ones. People ask what do you attribute any success you may have to and really the first thing is good players. We've been lucky that we've had good players. The other thing is that we've had really good assistant coaches. There are a lot of head coaches out there looking for guys to put on their staff, so I've been really fortunate to get the guys that I've had."

One final note. Tom Waisnor, Voice of the Pioneers, told me he is challenging the Lynnfield student body to show up and give the Pioneers a true home field advantage. I told him I would pass it on.

That's it for now. All that's left is to kick it off and play the game. It should be something special.

Check back Thanksgiving Day after the game for my first take on it. Happy Thanksgiving to everyone and see you at Pioneer Field Thursday morning.

Monday, November 19, 2012

The 1973 CAL Champion Pioneers: Title on the Line in North Reading


To commemorate the 40th anniversary of the first Pioneer team to play in the Cape Ann League, I am taking a week by week look back at the 1973 season.

Wayback Wednesday: The 1973
CAL Champion Pioneers
November 21, 1973 - The Pioneers and Hornets were well acquainted with each other over the years.

They had met 15 times since the Lynnfield program began in 1958 and the Pioneers had eaten Thanksgiving Day dinner as winners 11 times. The only four times the Hornets had been able to enjoy the holiday was in 1966, 1967 and 1968. They also beat the Pioneers in the first meeting between the schools in 1958, but that game was not played on the holiday. Going into the game in 1973, the Pioneers were riding a four game Tday winning streak.

But this time more than bragging rights were on the line for Lynnfield. Locked in a three way tie with Pentucket and Newburyport, the Pioneers could earn at least a share of the Cape Ann League title in their first year in the league with a win over the 4-4 Hornets. The Clippers were expected to easily take care of 4-4 Amesbury and as Villager reporter Geof Simons put it "Pentucket would have to report to the wrong field to lose to winless North Andover." So if the Pioneers had any hope of taking home a piece of the title, they would have to take care of business against North Reading.

The Pioneers came into the game with the dangerouse tandem of quarterback Steve Olsen and the league's leading receiver in Lindsay Ross. The Hornets countered with two way receiving and running threat Greg Stewart, who along with Paul Proudy provided most of the offense for North Reading. Quarterback Steve Hartery manned the controls at quarterback for the Hornets.

The two teams came in evenly matched offensively, with the Hornets 162 points just shy of the 180 scored by the Pioneers. But the big edge for Lynnfield was on defense where their 87 points allowed was half of the 176 points the Hornets gave up. Only Newburyport was able to score more than 14 points against the tough Pioneer D which posted three shutouts in eight games. The Hornets, on the other hand, surrendered more than 40 points twice and more than 20 points two other times. They hadn't shut out a team all season, even allowing North Andover to score a pair of touchdowns.

Simons summed up the situation for Lynnfield:

"But all the stats and all the past games boil down to one inescapable fact," Simons wrote. "North Reading must be beaten, and as always the Hornets are upset-minded. But chances are, when it's over, after the long months of exhausting practices and weekly trials, every Pioneer will share a piece of glory to carry back to Lynnfield and savor like a delicious meal."

Next: Title Time

1973 Flashback
In November, the town was in the midst of the first "Energy Crisis" as a result of the Arab oil embargo in response to the United States support of Israel in the Yom Kippur War in October. In response the to the spiraling energy costs, the School Committee approved a series of energy conservatioin measures. The elementary and junior high school thermostats were set at 68 degrees during the day and 62 degrees at night. At the high school, it was set to 58 degrees at night.

In addition, "shades will be closed at night and teachers will turn off the lights in rooms not in use." Also, "principals are studying traffic patterns in an effort to reduce opening and closing of outside doors."

The extension of the Christmas vacation was also under consideration.

Meanwhile, the senior Powerpuff football team beat the juniors 14-0 at Pioneer Field. Entertainment was provided by the male cheerleaders, made up of many of the football team.

If you played on or were involved with the 1973 Pioneers and would like to share a memory, please pass it on to me at tcondardo@gmail.com.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Lamusta, Thomas in NCAA Division III Playoffs Tomorrow


A pair of former Pioneer captains go into battle tomorrow in the NCAA Division III playoffs for Framingham State.

Pat Lamusta (2007 captain) and Mike Thomas (2011 captain) will suit up for the Rams against Cortland State (8-1) in NY tomorrow at 11 am. The Rams (10-1) earned their spot in the 32 team field with a 28-16 win over Salve Regina last week to capture the New England Football Conference championship.

I asked Pat for a quick update on him, Mike and the exciting season.

"It's been an awesome ride," he wrote me. "Mike is listed as a running back. He has been a scout team player and has played a little on special teams. Overall, he has adjusted to the college game well and is a positive contributor to our team.

"I started against Nichols, Umass-Dartmouth, and Bridgewater St., as a full-back blocking for our elite back, Melikke Van Alstyne (Salem, MA)," Pat went on. "We broke the team rushing record in a game with around 500 yds of total rushing against Nichols and defeated Bridgewater St, who was ranked #1 in New England going into that game. Unfortunately, I injured my ankle at the end of the Bridgewater game which sidelined me for a couple weeks. I returned in full force against Coast Guard, and have been bouncing back and forth between outside linebacker and fullback since.

"I am so proud to be a part of this program. Since I joined in Fall of 2010, the team has went 26-7, and it is just thrilling to be part of a great program that continues to grow. The Championship win against Salve Regina was all about swagger. We were the underdogs and came to play with a chip on our shoulder. Friday, we leave for SUNY-Cortland in the first round of the D3 tourney. Game is at 11 am on Saturday. Should be a solid matchup."

I'm sure we all wish the Rams (and former Pioneers) good luck!

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

The 1973 CAL Champion Pioneers: Daze and Knights


To commemorate the 40th anniversary of the first Pioneer team to play in the Cape Ann League, I am taking a week by week look back at the 1973 season.

Wayback Wednesday: The 1973
CAL Champion Pioneers
November 14, 1973 - Well they can't say they weren't warned.

The North Andover Scarlet Knights got a taste of the potent Pioneers in the CAL Jamboree two months earlier when they were smothered 33-0 in a two period scrimmage.

You would have to say they improved when the squads met for the final game before Thanksgiving Day. The Pioneers crushed North Andover 35-0, but this time it took them four full quarters to do it.

Or as Villager reporter Geof Simons aptly summed it up:

"As far as the North Andover game is concerned, nothing terribly earth shattering took place," Simons wrote. "The Pioneers did as expected and walked all over the Scarlet Knights."

The Pioneers did all their damage quickly and efficiently.

The Pioneers scored their first TD on a 52 yard march capped by a Steve Olsen five yard run. Brian Rea ran in the two point conversion and Lynnfield led 7-0.

The Pioneers then scored their next four TD's by forcing Knight turnovers and turning them into points.  The scenarios were all basically the same.

- Larry Mitkus recovers fumble on the NA 36 yard line. Four plays later Steve Celata runs it in from the  12 for the score. Allan Harrington boots the first of three PAT's  and the Pioneers lead 15-0.

- Craig Franklin intercepts a Wayne Alexander pass and returns it to the NA 13. Rea waltzes in from the eight for the score. The PAT was blocked but the Pioneers lead 21-0.

- Brian McMahon recovers a fumble at the NA 38 yard line. Harrington cashes in on a 37 yard jaunt, adds the extra point and the Pioneers lead 28-0.

- Lindsay Ross recovers a fumble on the NA 39 yard line. Five plays later Olsen hits him for his ninth TD of the year and league leading 60th point. Harrington hits the PAT to conclude the scoring as the Pioneers led 35-0.

The TD pass was the 13th of the year for Olsen and extended his all time LHS TD pass record to 23. Ross extended his all time LHS TD pass reception record to 11 with the grab.

The Pioneer defense was smothering all day, holding the Knights to only 69 yards of offense until a meaningless 75 yard drive in the second half.

The final two quarters were all about the Pioneers' second team which played the Knights' varsity even the rest of the way.

Where the Pioneers figured to beat North Andover to move to 7-1, 6-1 in the league, what wasn't expected was a 15-7 upset win by Pentucket over Newburyport. That dropped the Pioneers, Sachems and Clippers back into a three way tie for first with the league champion to be determined on Thanksgiving Day.

With the win, the Pioneers remained in sixth place in the Division Three Super Bowl standings with a rating of 64.37. Newburyport was right behind in seventh place. Pentucket jumped over both squads into third place.

Next: Preparing for the Hornets

1973 Flashback
The Refuse Disposal Committee recommended "replacing municipal rubbish collection with a voluntary system of recycling, home disposal of other wastes and yearly pickup of residues and large articles."

The committee noted that "home gas incinerators could be purchased on a group basis for $150."

Also, the League of Women Voters launched an Equal Rights Amendment bracelet campaign "to raise additional monies for ERA ratification activities in non-ratified states." The $3.00 purchase will be used to fund the effort to get the amendment, which would ensure equal rights for women, passed in the rest of the country.

Massachusetts ratified the amendment in June of 1972 but eight more states would be needed to enact it into law.

The bracelet is a band of nickel silver with the letters E.R.A pierced into it. "It is purposely neutral in design so that it can be worn by both men and women."

If you played on or were involved with the 1973 Pioneers and would like to share a memory, please pass it on to me at tcondardo@gmail.com.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Around the CAL/NEC 4: Week 10


Well, the Pioneers and Hornets have taken all the mystery out of the league race since it comes down to Thanksgiving Day for those two teams for the title and a trip to the playoffs. We can take a look at the pre-Thanksgiving Day games and a little bonus coverage for those looking ahead. First, let's check out the updated standings.


Looks good, doesn't it?

The Pioneers certainly made sure they were hitting on all cylinders heading into the title clash, but as I mentioned yesterday, North Reading nearly hit a speed bump in the form of the Ipswich Tigers.

The Tigers did the best job of the year on Carl Lipani holding him to 63 yards on 24 carries and keeping him out of the end zone for the only time this year. The only other time this season he didn't score a touchdown was against Pentucket where he did manage to get a two point conversion. No doubt the Pioneer defense will be looking for clues on how the Tigers managed to contain Division 3A's number two scorer (132 points).

Things were so tough for the Hornets that they actually had to attempt their 13th pass of the year and it was good for their third completion of the season. Jason Kellogg hit C. J. McCarthy for a 69 yard TD in the second period to give NR a 7-0 lead. The Tigers' Peter Moutevelis punched it in from six yards out to tie the game at the half 7-7.

McCarthy added an eight yard TD run in the third to give the Hornets a 13-7 lead. The Tigers blocked the extra point, but Evan Wade recovered it in the endzone for the two points that ended up being the winning margin.

Ipswich made it interesting in the end nearly scoring the winning TD but John Fortes intercepted a pass at the goal line with 11 seconds left to seal the nailbiting win.

The Tigers will look to make their season when they travel to Hamilton-Wenham on Thanksgiving Day in what should be a very interesting contest.

The Generals tuned up for that one with a 34-14 win over Georgetown. Trevor Lyons scored three times in the first quarter as H-W built a 20-0 lead.

They added another score in the second and one in the third to take a 34-0 lead before the Royals put up two fourth quarter scores.

For those looking ahead, the winner of the North Reading/Lynnfield contest will play the CAL/NEC 3 Champion on the Tuesday following Thanksgiving. Regardless of which squad advances, there will be a familiar foe waiting for them.

With a last second win over Pentucket on Saturday, Amesbury ensured that the Indian/Clipper Thanksgiving Day battle will decide that league's champion. Pentucket nearly threw a monkey wrench into that when Cody Rothwell scored with 32 seconds left to give the Sachems a 20-14 lead.

But Matt Talbot drove the Indians down the field and threw a tipped TD pass to Ben Cullen with one second left to tie the score. Mac Short nailed the PAT for the win.

With the winner-take-all affair set regardless of the outcome, Newburyport lost to Winthrop 18-16 on a late Viking score.

North Reading lost to Newburyport 19-14 in the closing minutes of their game and the Pioneers fell 7-6 to the Clippers. The Hornets handled the Indians easily 21-7 while Lynnfield needed a heart-palpitating comeback to get by Amesbury 31-27.

Regardless of which teams advance, the Division 3A semifinals should provide an outstanding contest.

That's it for now. Check back Wednesday for my next post on the 1973 Pioneers.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Manchester-Essex Leftovers


Any time you beat a team by 34 points and hang 47 on the scoreboard, you know the team has performed well. But the Pioneers' 47-13 win Friday night was even more impressive considering the circumstances.

The game had no standings or playoff implications and the Pioneers knew they were playing a team hobbled by injuries that had managed only two wins. And the big CAL/NEC 4 Championship Game with North Reading is looming on Thanksgiving Day.

It would be understandable for the lads to lose focus in a game such as this.

You only need to glance down the other end of Chestnut Street to see how North Reading handled a similar situation. Now I've seen the NR Hornets twice this year and they appear to be every bit as committed and focused as the Pioneers, but they apparently took their eye off the ball against Ipswich Friday night.

They found themselves tied with the snarling Tigers at halftime, then pulled ahead 15-7 in the third only to see Ipswich come back to within two at 15-13. They threatened to punch in the winning score but a Hornet interception at the one yard line with 11 seconds left preserved the narrow win.

"I give Ipswich all the credit," said North Reading offensive coordinator Ed Melanson. "They came ready to play and after seeing them live and on film I think they played their best game. As for us, we had a bad week of practice and it showed. We warned the boys that this was the very definition of a trap game and it proved to be just that. We came out flat and it hurt, I'm not making excuses, Ipswich came out flying. We were lucky to get out of there with the win."

No such lapses in chilly Manchester-by-the-Sea.

With their efficient, workmanlike dismantling of M/E, the Pioneers proved once again that they are a supremely focused group. That is a credit to both the players and head coach Neal Weidman's coaching staff who always seems to have the team prepared for every opponent.

"We watched them live and watched them on film too," Weidman said of M/E. "They have a lot of seniors and they do some good things. They have a lot of pride too. Last year they proved it against us when they came down and outplayed us."

Weidman knew how important it is to be playing at your best especially with what lies ahead.

"You always want to have a good feeling going into that last one," the coach said. "You need to be playing at your best because we're going to play the best team we've played all year."

Playing the Field
The Pioneers were highly efficient on offense obviously, but they were also blessed with great field position - especially in the first half.

M/E started things off by going for it on fourth and five from their own 46 but Anthony Costa flushed Cory Burnham out of the pocket and the pass fell incomplete so that is where the Pioneers took over.

Their other first half possessions began at the M/E 49, M/E 39, L49, L31 and L34. It's tough to keep the high powered Pioneer offense out of the endzone under normal circumstances, but when you spot them half the field or more, it becomes near impossible as the Hornets found out.

Adam Smasher Redux
Freshman Adam Buchanan, the Pioneers' designated short yardage QB - think Tebow Time, tripled his normal workload with three carries against the Hornets. He picked up eight yards, five for a first down to the one and then on the next play one yard for the touchdown on the opening drive of the second half. He had the last carry of the game for the Pioneers going for two yards.

Buchanan now has 8 carries on the year for 11 total yards but he has earned four first downs and scored two touchdowns.

Efficiency.

Extra, Extra
Senior Alex Roper had another five point extra point night against M/E. It was the second straight five PAT game in a row for Roper, the first time in LHS that anyone has accomplished that. It was the senior's third five PAT game.

Nowadays nearly every team, including the Pioneers, opt to kick for the extra point after touchdowns. But it wasn't always so. Lynnfield High football began in 1958, but the Pioneers didn't kick their first PAT until 31 games into the program. It took until 1961 when Dudley Welch booted one in a 63-0 win over Bedford for the Pioneers to get their first extra point.

So let's see how things have changed since the early days.

Roper has 22 PAT's this season in nine games.

From Lynnfield's first game in 1958, it took until 1973, 135 games later, for the Pioneers to equal those 22 PAT's. All time, the Pioneers have kicked 449 points after. All time Pioneer kicking leader Steve Ullian (75) and Roper who is in second place with 43, account for 26% of all Lynnfield PAT's in history.

Not So Special
The only nit one could pick with the Pioneers' performance on Friday was a couple of early breakdowns on M/E kick returns. The Hornets broke the opening kick for 30 yards and no harm was done when the Pioneers forced a four and out.

On the kickoff following the Pioneers' second TD, Chris Dumont sliced through the Pioneer coverage team for a 48 yard return. Kicker Connor Lordan finally brought him down with a touchdown saving tackle.

On the very next play, Burnham hit John Beardsley for a 36 yard TD pass to cut the Pioneer lead to 14-6.

"We didn't really cover that well on the first couple that were bad," Weidman said. "One we had a kid fall down which created a hole. The second one we kind of bounced over to the sideline and we didn't do a good job. We had a guy go out of his lane so that was a problem."

Run Down
M/E head coach Mike Athanas was quoted in the Gloucester Times before the game that the Pioneers were simply too tough to run against and he would be looking to his air attack to move the ball.

True to his word, the Hornets came out chucking, virtually abandoning the running game from the get-go. Eight of their first 12 plays and 11 of their first 16 were pass attempts. The results were two completions for 48 yards and a touchdown, six incompletions, one pass interference call and two sacks by captain Andrew Kibarian.

It probably wasn't a bad strategy though as the five runs of the first 16 plays went +1, +1, +25, -1, -1. For the game, the Hornets managed 91 yards, 25 on that first quarter run.

Knee High
Last week, sophomore Jonathan Knee made a nice play on a goal line stand to keep Georgetown out of the endzone. Friday night he made a great play on offense to keep the Pioneers' final scoring drive alive.

Facing a fourth and four from the M/E 32, Knee took the handoff on an end around needing to get to the 27 for the first down. He was hit at the 32 but shrugged that off. He was wrapped up at the 31 but Knee, all 120 pounds of him, kept driving and carried the tackler for three yards to the 27 and the first down as the Pioneer sideline erupted in cheers.

Great individual effort.

Everybody Into The Pool!
Knee wasn't the only Jayvee to see action as the coaching staff was able to clear the sideline and get just about everyone into the game. The Pioneers had 13 players run the ball as everyone had a chance to taste varsity action.

"It was very good," Weidman said of his ability to get everyone it. "We really wanted to play certain guys in meaningful situations when the game is still in the balance and see what they can do."

That's it for now. Check back Monday night when I'll take a look at other action around the league.