HP vs Lake Highlands: Before the Kickoff

The Scots welcome the Lake Highlands Wildcats to this side of Northwest Highway tonight for the first time since 1999, head coach Randy Allen’s first year at Highland Park.

RichardsonLakeHighlands helmets“Lake Highlands was a playoff team last year,” said Allen. “They are well disciplined, well coached and they play hard. They are 2-1 in district, coming off a 45-38 win over Richardson.”

The Wildcats have lost to Rowlett, 37-35; Colleyville Heritage, 40-16; and Mesquite, 56-21. They’ve beaten Plano East, 18-13; Berkner, 37-22; and Richardson, 45-38.

Brock Jones (#13) is the Wildcats quarterback. He has completed 38 of 76 passes for 608 yards and seven touchdowns. Junior quarterback Brendyn Gettens (#16) has seen plenty of action, completing 22 of 29 passes for 286 yards and four touchdowns.

The leading wide receiver for LH is Jamarice Preston, who has caught 35 passes for 630 yards and eight TDs. He is averaging 18 yards per catch and is the Wildcats’ leading scorer for the season.

Lake Highlands has a healthy ground game, led by a big front line and a punishing runner named Tyler Hughes, who has rumbled 140 times for 684 yards and seven touchdowns over the first six games. Last season as a junior he gained more than 1,000 yards while averaging 6.3 yards per carry. Not only is Hughes a tough runner but is armed with 4.5 speed.

Experience will be a key for the Wildcats at the skill positions. Last year Jones was the team’s leading passer, Preston was the top receiver and Hughes led the team in rushing.

In Last Friday’s 45-38 win over Richardson, Jones scored with 30 seconds left in the game to put Lake Highlands up by three. But that was enough time for the Eagles to drive to the Wildcats sixyard line and kick a field goal to send the game into overtime.

Lake Highlands fed the ball to its power runner and he went 25 yards in three runs to score in overtime. Richardson then drove to the six-yard line before a fourth-down interception in the end zone ended the nail-biter.

The Wildcats gained 535 yards of total offense, including 144 yards on the ground by running back Hughes and 175 yards receiving by wide receiver Preston.

The Scots are coming off a tough 42-27 loss to Mesquite Horn at Hanby Stadium. The loss snapped the Scots’ impressive 37-game district winning streak and marks the third HP district loss in the past 16 years. The major difference-maker was Horn’s talented wide receiver Jarrison Stewart, who caught six passes for 120 yards, including touchdowns of 20, 34 and 28 yards.

But Stewart’s biggest play helped set the tone for the Jaguars in the first quarter. After Brooks Burgin (#5, 6-2, 189) led the Scots on a textbook 98-yard touchdown drive to start the game, Stewart returned a punt for 67 yards to tie it up and give the crowd a preview of how the game was going to be played. Stewart’s big plays earned him The Dallas Morning News Offensive Player of the Week. He is verbally committed to TCU.

“Our mistakes – the punt return, a fumble and an interception – were key to Horn going up 28-14 at the half,” said Allen. “We came back and with four minutes left we had the ball and were down by eight.”

The Jaguars defense held the Scots offense and then ran out the clock by lining up 290-pound nose guard Dalen Morgan in the backfield and handing him the ball. He rolled for 51 yards on three carries, including a 27-yard touchdown with 56 seconds left in the game. The Scots battled back and the game ended with HP on the two-yard line.

So Horn has the inside track to the district championship but the Scots feel that they can learn from this defeat and it can help them in the playoffs.

“It takes playing a good team for us to learn the areas in which we need to improve,” said Allen. “We’re excited and anxious to get back on the field and find out what we’ve learned. ”

The biggest lesson the Scots learned at Hanby on Friday is that a team cannot give up two fumbles and two interceptions and expect to beat a good opponent.

With a solid dose of reality, the Scots are practicing a little harder and are working on areas that need improvement. Defensive back Pearson Feagans (#22, 6-0, 165) is out with a broken collar bone.

Linebacker Michael Linehan (#35, 6-1, 230) had a good game for the Scots. His six tackles included three for a loss and one sack. Linebacker Mitchell Kaufman (#10, 6-3, 225) overcame a nagging back injury and was credited with six solo tackles. Feagans had four solo tackles before his injury. Nose guard Danny Gouskos (#94, 5-9, 210) had seven total tackles including one for a loss.

Tonight the Scots will be battling turnovers as well as Wildcats.

Before the Kickoff

HP vs J.J. Pearce

October 3, 2014

jj pearce mustangs logoAn old rivalry renews tonight as the Highland Park Scots and J.J.

Pearce Mustangs battle for the first time as 6A warriors.

Reunited in District 10-6A, the two schools are known for the

similarities in their sports teams, student bodies and winning traditions.

While the Scots lead the Mustangs in wins on the gridiron,

nobody can forget the 2001 double-overtime thriller in

Richardson when Pearce handed HP one of its only two district

losses during the Randy Allen era, dating back to 1999.

“Our games with Pearce are always emotional,”

said Allen. “They were excited

when we joined their 10-6A district. Their

school is in close proximity to ours and our

kids know their kids. This game renews an

old rivalry.”

This is a rebuilding year for the Mustangs.

They are coming off a 5-6 season in 2013

where they squeaked into the playoffs. This

season they come into Highlander Stadium

with a 1-3 record. Pearce has been defeated

by McKinney, 26-22, McKinney North,

54-16, and Richardson, 48-30. In Week 2

the Mustangs beat South Garland, 49-42.

In last week’s contest against the Richardson Eagles, Pearce used

two quarterbacks, Hank Hughes (#11) and Austin Noland (#7).

Hughes completed 11 of 21 passes for 117 yards while Noland

connected on 10 of 14 passes for 75 yards. The top three wide

receivers are Jake Griffin (#6) with 22 receptions for 261 yards,

Hughes with 10 receptions for 143 yards and Ryan Hart (#4) with

six catches for 122 yards.

The Mustangs have three runners with over 100 yards. Hughes

leads the team with 197 yards on 39 carries while Jake Hercamp

(#27) has 118 yards on 20 carries and Alex Silva (#22) has gained

112 yards on 23 carries. The number to remember is that each of

these Mustangs is averaging more than five yards per carry.

The Scots will try to keep Hughes bottled up wherever he lines

up and keep Griffin from nabbing too many passes.

A potent Highland Park offense that is averaging 44.5 points per

game will face a Pearce defense that is allowing 42.5. Conversely, a

Scots defense that is allowing 13 points per game will square off

against a Mustang offense that averaging 29.

In last Friday’s 29-9 win over North Mesquite, the Scots started

slow, falling behind 9-0 in the second quarter. The spirited

Stallions defense bottled up the Scots, keep them from a first down

until midway through the second quarter. Then HP quarterback

Brooks Burgin (#5, 6-2, 189) hit wide receiver Andrew Frost (#3,

6-0, 180) with a 24-yard touchdown strike to allow the Scots to go

into halftime with a small 9-7 deficit.

During halftime the Scots players made adjustments and decided

that they’d like to play more efficiently. The second half Scots

looked like a new team. The offense scored 22 points while the

swarming defense shut out the Stallions, allowing them only 48

total yards in the second half. The game ended after HP’s 29 unanswered

points propelled them into the new

world of 6A football.

“We need to start faster,” said Allen.

“North Mesquite was emotional and they

executed well. We were a little stale after

our open date. Once we got in sync we

were able to score 29 points and hold

them. We played a good team and got our

first 6A win. We won the fourth quarter.

Our defense was consistent throughout the

game and our offense showed signs of running

the ball well. Our kicking game was

solid all night and we had two play-action

passes for touchdowns.”

Running back Stephen Dieb (#34, 5-7, 145) made some NM

defenders think he was 6’3″ and 240 lbs. as he ran over, ran

around and ran through several Stallions en route to a 140-yard

game. Dieb averaged more than eight yards per carry.

Burgin finished the night completing 12 of 27 passes for 175

yards and three touchdowns. Frost caught three passes for 89

yards and two TDs, Kevin Ken (#17, 6-0, 170) grabbed six passes

for 57 yards and one touchdown.

Linebacker Michael Linehan (#35, 6-1, 230) had a monster

game against North Mesquite, with 17 tackles (nine of which were

solo) and earning The Dallas Morning News Defensive Player of

the Week honorable mention. Hayden Schnieders (#40, 5-10,

195) had 14 tackles, Matthew White (#49, 6-2, 205) had 12,

Danny Gouskos (#94, 5-9, 210) had nine, Nick Waterman (#44,

6-2, 217) had eight while Benji Walzel (#31, 5-10, 170) and Zach

Snelling (#32, 6-0, 205) each had seven.

Injured linebacker Mitchell Kaufman (#10, 6-3, 225) is expected

to rest again tonight. In his place the Scots will continue to play

Snelling and Josh Block (#41, 5-10, 180).

 

HP vs Prosper
September 12, 2014

The Prosper Eagles soar into Highland Stadium for the first time
to battle the Scots, who boast an 80-game home winning streak.
That streak looked vulnerable last Friday with five and half minutes
left in the first half against Pulaski Academy of Little Rock.
The Bruins had just scored to go up 28-14, testing the Scots, the
coaching staff and the jam-packed home crowd.
A minute later the Scots offense reached into its own quiver of
electricity and pulled out a lightening bolt as scatback Stephen
Dieb (#34, 5-7, 145) scored on a nine-yard
run to tighten the score, to 28-21.
Then lightening stuck again 20 seconds
later as linebacker Mitchell “Pick Six”
Kaufman (#10, 6-3, 225) stepped in front of
a Pulaski pass and returned it 33 yards to tie
the contest and change the complexion of
the battle. It was a game-changing play.
With the momentum dramatically shifted
in Highland Park’s favor, the defense smothered
Pulaski’s fourth down attempt on its
own 32-yard line and then it took quarterback
Brooks Burgin (#5, 6-2, 189) two
plays to put the Scots ahead at halftime. He hit Sam Welfelt (#9,
6-2, 180) with a 22-yard strike, then Dieb ran it in from the
10-yard line with 2:32 remaining in the half.
That third lightening bolt put HP ahead 35-28. The Scots had
scored 21 points in less than two minutes and never trailed again.
In the third quarter the Scots defense stopped the Bruins again
on a fourth down attempt at the Pulaski 30-yard line. (Maybe it’s a
good idea to punt sometimes.) Burgin hit Andrew Frost (#3, 6-0,
180) with two strikes for 21 yards, Dieb picked up two more then
Burgin ran it in from the seven, giving the Scots a 42-28 cushion.
In the fourth quarter Dieb scored his third touchdown to put the
Scots up, 48-28. The Bruins came back strong at the end of the
game, scoring twice and tightening the score to 48-42 but the HP
kickoff return team warriors recovered the Bruins’ final onside
kick … as they had done with every onside kick all night, giving
the HP offense nice field position throughout the entire game.
“Our ability to get the onside kicks was important,” said HP
head coach Randy Allen . “Our defense got better as the game
went on. We scored 34 unanswered points and had a seven-point
halftime lead, which was important. I think that Mitchell
Kaufman’s interception return for a touchdown was important.
“Pulaski was as good or better than we had thought. They had
solid blocking and good players at skill positions. Their quarterback
was good and their team is used to winning. I think it is
important that we didn’t play our best game and still beat a good
team. Their offense ran 93 plays – 60 is normal – so our defense
was on the field a lot. We had players cramping but they were
never demoralized. I give them credit for adjusting to the fourthdown
plays and finding a way to win. It was an exciting game and
we came out healthy and came out with a win. Plus we were
exposed to some new formations and schemes. We’ll be better prepared
next season when we play them.”
Tonight the Scots face Prosper, which
beat Birdville, 41-20, and lost to Justin
Northwest, 42-19. The Eagles were 3-7 last
season after graduating star quarterback
Davis Webb (Texas Tech) and receiver
Torii Hunter (Notre Dame), who had led
Prosper to gridiron glory.
“Prosper is good offensively,” said Allen.
“They’ve got a running back (Robert
Mahone ) who ran a kickoff back 90 yards
for a touchdown against Justin Northwest.
Their quarterback (Colton Hepp ) wears
number 90. He’s a good passer and good runner. Prosper has a lot
of pride and good school spirit. They are a classy group and they
want to be the best.”
Against Birdville, Hepp passed for 210 yards and Mahone had a
95-yard touchdown run. The Bruins kicker, Liam Gamboa , connected
on a 40-yard field goal.
In the first two games of the season, Scots QB Burgin has completed
33 of 48 passes (69 percent) for 517 yards, four touchdowns
and one interception. Dieb leads the team in rushing with
136 yards on 23 carries (six yards per carry) and three touchdowns.
Campbell Brooks (#2, 6-0, 175) has caught nine passes
for 228 yards and four touchdowns to lead the team in receiving.
Leading the Scots in tackles against Pulaski were linebackers
Matthew White (#49, 6-2, 205) and Michael Linehan (#35, 6-1,
230), followed by defensive ends Michael Thornton (#95, 6-2,
215) and Nick Waterman (#44, 6-2, 217) and linebacker Hayden
Schnieders (#40, 5-10, 195). The HP defense will have a healthy
Danny Gouskos (#94, 5-9, 210) back at nose guard tonight.
“Our depth was important in our victory over Pulaski,” said
Allen, “and it will be just as important against Prosper.”