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    Loudon vs. Happy Valley, TSSAA Playoff #2

     

    Redskins advance in playoffs with road squeaker

    by Brittany Davis, Loudon News Hearld

    Nov. 16, 2008

    Flags littered the field Friday night as the Loudon Redskins traveled to Happy Valley for the second round of the TSSAA playoffs. There were more than 20 penalties thrown during Loudon's 21-14 win over the Warriors, but that didn't matter as the Redskin defense showed up huge on Happy Valley's last offensive series.

    Devan Grissom started the defensive stand by getting a huge breakup for Loudon on a third and seven pass attempt.  On fourth and seven, Jeffery Nichols had the biggest sack of the night to get the ball back in the hands of Loudon's offense – which held a 21-14 lead with 1:40 to play in the game.  The Redskins then ran out the clock to claim their spot in the third round of the playoffs – and the right to challenge defending state champion Alcoa.

    Loudon took the opening kick off down to its own 42-yard line.  Matthew Wallace then took the ball and picked up another first down.  On third and eight, the snap was fumbled and Happy Valley recovered at its 43.

    Loudon's defense stepped up, though, and forced the Warriors into a three and out.  Each team traded out possessions, but it was the Warriors who were able to get within striking distance first.
    Happy Valley's drive was helped out with a personal foul and a facemask by the Redskins, but with the Warriors with a first and goal from the 10-yard line it was Richard Butkus who got a huge sack for a loss of 10.

    On second and goal from the 20, Loudon's secondary was able to force an incomplete pass.
    The Warriors tried once again for the air on third down, but Keenan Hawkins came away with a huge interception.

    Loudon's offense started out on its own two-yard line and that proved to be a problem as they were only able to get to their own 31 before punting.  After a failed Happy Valley drive, the Redskins got the ball back with 44 seconds left to go in the first quarter. D'Andre Miley took the first carry and picked up five yards to get out to Happy Valley's 33 and end the period.

    To start the second quarter, it was Wallace who was able to pick up the first down out to the 25.  From there Loudon went five yards back on a false start, but that didn't matter, as Miley was able to get back to the 15.  Wallace then converted the third and short to just outside the 10.  From there it was Miley who took the ball into the end zone from two yards out after three attempts.  The point after was blocked, but the Redskins were up 6-0.

    That lead was short lived, however, as the Warriors answered on their next drive.  They went 71 yards to pay dirt with the touchdown coming on a 35-yard touchdown throw from Ethan Fleenor to Jake Hodge.  The PAT was no good, and Happy Valley evened the game at six with 6:57 left in the second.

    The Redskins came back on offense and were able to get things going.  Brandon Johnson found Hawkins, but he was unable to convert on third and 15.  Loudon lined up in punt formation, but it was Wade Plemons who took the snap and picked up the first down at the 36.

    Miley carried the ball on back to back plays and was able to pick up a first down at the 20.  The senior tailback carried once again and picked up four yards, but there was a flag on the play.  The Redskins faced a second and 16 and once again it was Miley who got the call.  On third and 10 Miley followed Tyler Barr's block and picked up six points.  Once again Loudon went to trickery as Johnson found Barr for the two-point conversion from the field goal set.  Loudon was up 14-6 with nearly two minutes to go before the half.

    The Warriors weren't done driving in the half, though, and with 1:42 to play they got down to first and goal from the nine.  The Redskin defense stepped up, however and held the line four straight times to force the turnover.  Loudon was up 14-6 at halftime.

    That lead didn't last very long after the break, as the Warriors were able to pick off a Redskin pass to start the third quarter.  They started their drive at their own 42 and marched down field.  They finally hit pay dirt with 7:08 to go on a third down conversion as Landon South scored on the carry.  Fleenor then found Joe Guinn for the two-point conversion to tie the game at 14.

      Loudon's next offensive series was plagued by penalties as four yellow hankies were thrown for 20 total yards.  All that frustration led to an interception by Happy Valley.

    The Redskins defense had enough, though, and stepped up with a big three and out capped off by what would have been an interception by Grissom, but he was ruled out of bounds.

    Each team traded possessions, but the Redskins got the ball back with 10:10 left to go in the game.
    The Redskins picked up a first down but had it called back for an illegal shift.  Barr got two carries to get back all but one yard.  Plemons was able to pick up the first down on a quarterback keeper.  Plemons then found Aaron Anderson for another huge first down to go inside Happy Valley territory.
    Once again Barr got the call and was able to pick up another Loudon first down.

    Barr took the Redskins down to the five-yard line where the Warriors were called for two consecutive offsides.  Miley was able to take the ball in from the one and a half yard line to pick up six.  Carlos Espinoza's extra point was good to give Loudon the lead 21-14 with 3:39 to go.

    Loudon's defensive stand started with Espinoza's kick off, which was bobbled at the five yard line by Happy Valley.  The Warrior return only made it to the 15, giving them a long field for the comeback attempt.

    On first down, Fleenor's pass was incomplete, but on second down he found Hodge and the Redskins were flagged for a facemask.  As a result, Happy Valley had the ball at the 39.  Fleenor went to Hodge again but the Redskin defense was able to hold him to only three yards.  The next two passes were incomplete; the second was on a huge knock down by Grissom.  Then on fourth and seven, Nichols had the biggest sack of the year for Loudon.

    The Redskins took over on downs at the Warriors 32 yard line with 1:40 to play.  They were able to pick up a first down and run two plays before lining up in victory formation.

    With the win, Loudon will get a chance at a rematch with Alcoa after falling to the Tornadoes 37-0 in the regular season finale.  Game time is set for 7 p.m. Friday night in Alcoa.
     

    Loudon vs. South Greene, TSSAA Playoff #1

     

    Redskins advance with near-record breaking performance

    by Dewey Morgan, Loudon News Hearld

    Nov. 6, 2008

    Photos from CoachT by Sammie Dunlap
    It was almost a record breaking night for the Loudon Redskins Friday night as they piled up 451 yards on the ground in a 43-6 win over South Greene in the opening round of the Tennessee Secondary Schools Association (TSSAA) playoffs.

    The Redskins, a number 2 seed out of Region 2(2A) playing at home against Region 1(2A)'s no. 3 seed, got off to a slow start but saw the running game open things up. Down 6-0 after the Rebels' opening drive, the Redskins were in danger of falling behind even more as South Greene moved the ball inside the Loudon 10.  A slant pass into the end zone was tipped, though, and Nathan West came away with the interception.  He took it back out to the Loudon seven, and the running game took it from there. On the first play from scrimmage, senior D'Andre Miley broke through the line and sprinted 93 yards down the left sideline to paydirt.

    Carlos Espinoza hit the extra point, and Loudon swung momentum with a 7-6 lead. "That was big, that was the spark we needed," said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig after the game. "We've told everybody all year long D'Andre's the kind of guy that gives us that spark and he made a big play." Miley was making big plays all night for the Redskins, carrying the ball 19 times for 201 yards and two touchdowns. Fellow tailback Tyler Barr added 34 yards and three scores and junior Jake Brown tacked on 69 yards and a score. The combined 451 total rushing yards came just two yards shy of the team rushing record set in 2005 against Lenoir City.

    The long TD run by Miley truly was a momentum shifter, as the next South Greene drive began at the Rebels own four and lasted just two plays before a fumble recovery by Aaron Anderson set Loudon up for another score. One play after the fumble, Barr dove in from a yard out and extended the Redskin lead. Espinoza hit the PAT again, giving Loudon a full 14-6 advantage. After a three and out by the Rebels, the Redskins were back on the board again. A 15-play, 71-yard drive by Loudon culminated in a 33-yard field goal by Espinoza and, with 4:30 left in the half, the hosts led 17-6.

    The visitors continued to have problems holding onto the football in the wet conditions, as quarterback Scott Susong fumbled the ball on the second play of the ensuing drive and Anderson had his second recovery of the game. Seven plays later, Barr punched in his second TD of the game, after recording 16 of the 30 yards on the drive. Espinoza missed this PAT, keeping the Loudon advantage at 23-6 at the break.

    Both offenses struggled to get anything going coming out of halftime, as neither team found the end zone through four combined drives to open the third. Finally, after a South Greene punt traveled to the Rebel 34, the Redskins dented the scoreboard. Barr punched in the lone score of the third quarter, capping an eight-play drive with a four-yard run over left tackle. Espinoza once again was wide on the point after, leaving Loudon with a 29-6 lead after three quarters.

    The third period clock rolled to all zeros tow plays into a Loudon drive, and it took the Redskins just two more plays in the new quarter to hit the end zone. A 41-yard pass play from Brandon Johnson to Dejay Johnson moved the ball to the Rebel 32 to end the quarter and then Miley took over, rushing three times for 32 yards – the last of which went for 20 yards and six points.

    Espinoza got back on track with hit extra points, extending the Redskin advantage to 36-6. South Greene threatened to put up points on the next drive, but a big play by Loudon put an end to that.

    Susong drove the Rebels through the air to the Loudon 35 before taking a shot for the end zone. On third and five, Susong went down the left sideline, looking for Andrew Long.  The man he found, though, was Loudon's Josh Berry, who stepped in front of the receiver for the pick and was promptly tackled at the one.

    The Redskin running game was unphased by the shadow of the end zone, though, as Matthew Wallace took the first handoff for 11 yards and a first down. Twelve plays later, all runs, Jake Brown found an opening in the middle of the line and broke free for a 10-yard touchdown run. Espinoza sealed the final tally with his fourth PAT.

    "I think we got some confidence back and we'll have a better start for sure next week," Harig said. The game he referenced is the second round contest at Happy Valley Friday night. The number one seed from Region 1(2A) earned the berth with a 20-7 win over West Greene.
    Game time is set for 7 p.m.
    Region Title Eludes Loudon in Loss to Alcoa

    by Brittany Davis, Loudon News Hearld

    Nov. 1, 2008

    The Loudon Redskins headed to Alcoa to take on the number one ranked Tornadoes Thursday night for the Region 2(2A) championship.  Loudon had a daunting task, as Alcoa had allowed no visitor to put up any points at home.  This night would be no different as the Tornadoes won the region championship with a 37-0 victory over the Redskins.

    The Tornadoes put up 34 points in the first half leaving the Redskins with a big hole to dig out of, though the opening possession for the hosts didn't mirror that.  The first series for Alcoa ended in a fumble with the Redskins recovering.

    Loudon took the ball from its own 43-yard line with D'Andre Miley getting the call on first down.  Alcoa's defense was ready and knocked Miley back for a five yard loss.  Quarterback Wade Plemons then tried to run the ball, but was denied.  On third down the Redskins were offsides and the Tornadoes declined to force Loudon to punt.

    Alcoa's second offensive possession ended with seven points.  The Tornadoes marched down the field and capped off the drive with a 15-yard option from Chase James to Jalik Toney for the score.  Derrick Brodus added the point after to give the Tornadoes a 7-0 lead

    Loudon went three and out on its next series, but the visitors didn't go down without a bit of trickery.  Plemons gave the ball to Miley on the reverse and he he went back to Keenan Hawkins for the double reverse on third down, but it didn't fool Alcoa.  Hawkins lined up to punt and returnman Daniel Cline fielded it at the 45 yard line and took it all the way to pay dirt for the Tornadoes.  Brodus's point after was good and Alcoa increased its lead to 14-0.

    The Redskins still couldn't get anything going offensively and were once again forced to punt.
    To start the second quarter, Alcoa lined up on first down at its own 42 and James found A.J. Young for the 58-yard score.  Brodus remained perfect on points after and the Tornadoes were up 21-0.

    The Redskin offense finally picked up its initial first down of the night when Tyler Barr rushed for 22 yards, but that was all Loudon was able to do on the drive and Hawkins was once again called on to punt.

    Alcoa took the ball from its own 30 and, after picking up two first downs, James found Robinson for another 58 yard TD.  Brodus' PAT was good as the Tornadoes added to their lead, 28-0.

    After yet another Loudon punt, the Tornadoes took the ball from their own 40-yard line, after marching down the field to the visiting four they lined up to kick the field goal.  On the snap, though, James came in from the tight end position to get the ball and found Robinson for the TD.  The point after was no good, but Alcoa took the 34-0 lead into halftime.

    The third quarter got under way with the Redskins throwing an interception from their own 20.  Alcoa then took the ball down to the eight, but weren't able to get into the end zone.  Brodus knocked through the field goal, increasing the Tornado lead to 37-0 and putting the mercy rule into effect.
    The rest of the third quarter passed by without either team scoring.

    At the end of the fourth quarter the Redskins marched the ball down field from their own 36-yard line.  Brandon Johnson found Keenan Hawkins for a first down at the 48.  From there Jordan Purdy got the call and carried a few Tornadoes down the field and picked up another first down for the Redskins.  The drive stalled, though, on a series of incomplete passes and then the clock expiring.  The Tornadoes clinched yet another unbeaten season in region play and stayed unscored upon at home as the clock hit zero.

    Despite the loss, Loudon will still receive a home playoff game in the opening round.
     
    Loudon vs. Boyd Buchanan '08 - Photos by Sammie Dunlap
    Buccaneers overpower Redskins during rainy homecoming
    by Dewey Morgan - Loudon News Hearld
    October 25, 2008
    The first quarter activities gave way to three quarters of stalemate Friday night as the Loudon Redskins dropped their homecoming date to Boyd-Buchanan 13-6 on a rain-soaked evening.

    “I didn't know if we could match up physically with them,” said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig.  “Their defense was good, I thought our defense played well, but we didn't play as well as their defense.”
    Harig added he thought his players did meet the physical challenge brought by the Buccaneers, but ultimately the offense just didn't make enough plays.  “We were just out of sorts a little bit.  We had the emotional blocked punt and score and I thought we were too emotional.  We just didn't settle down after that,” he added.

    The blocked punt Harig spoke of came after the opening possession of the game.  Boyd took the ball first and Trey Ferguson returned the kick 47 yards to Loudon's 46.  The Redskin defense was stout, though, holding the Bucs to just four yards and forcing them into a punt.  On the punt, Loudon's Aaron Anderson beat his man to the corner and laid out to block the punt.  Tyler Barr scooped up the loose ball and raced 40 yards to paydirt.  Carlos Espinoza's extra point was then blocked, keeping the Loudon advantage at 6-0.

    Boyd then took possession at its own 13 after the kickoff and orchestrated a 12-play scoring drive.  The first play of the drive set the tone for the Bucs as Taylor Gilley broke free for a 23-yard pickup to the visitors' 36.  The Buccaneer offense then gained 18 yards on the next four plays, setting up a fourth and two from the Loudon 46.  Boyd Head Coach Grant Reynolds decided to go for it from here and tailback Ben Beasley rewarded the gamble with a three-yard run for the conversion.

    The Buccaneers covered the final 43 yards in just five plays, as Gilley capped the drive with a 14-yard touchdown run over left tackle.  Jake Lockert nailed the PAT, and Boyd-Buchanan held what would result in a winning margin, 7-6.

    A key mistake by the Redskins set Boyd up in prime field position on the ensuing drive.  The Redskins began from their own 34 and gained a net of one yard over the next two plays as tailback D'Andre Miley gained two yards, but then receiver Devan Grissom was pulled down for a one-yard loss on an option play.

    Facing a third and one, Redskin senior quarterback Brandon Johnson had a pass tipped into the air and intercepted by Boyd's Lockert.  The Bucs took over at the host 36 and took advantage of the short field.

    A 20-yard pass from quarterback Nic Hughes to Ferguson moved the ball inside the 20 before a rush of a yard by Gilley put the pigskin at the Loudon 15.  Hughes kept the ball on the zone read play this time, finding room to run the necessary yardage to paydirt.  Lockert missed this extra point, but the 13-6 lead was plenty for Boyd with 4:09 still left in the opening quarter.

    The Redskin offense still had some threats left in it, though, despite the teams trading punts for the next three minutes.

    Finally, with 15 seconds left in the half, a Boyd punt from its own 13 was tipped by the Redskin rush and the ball landed harmlessly at the visitors' 20.  Loudon took possession there, and Harig called for the field goal unit.

    With five seconds remaining, Espinoza's attempt to cut into the deficit was blocked by the Buccaneer rush, sending Loudon to the locker room still down by seven.

    The stats mirrored the struggles of the Redskins through  the first half, as the Buccaneers enjoyed ground success to the tune of 120 yards, while the Redskins hit halftime with zero yards rushing.  Halftime passing yardage did favor Loudon, though only slightly at 30 yards for the hosts and 25 for the visitors.

    Harig said the weather didn't have much effect on his gameplanning, but Boyd's stingy defense did.  “That was just like running into a brick wall,” the coach said about the team's attempts to run outside the tackles in the first half.  “They did a good job of taking away what we did well.”  The Redskins attempted four rushes for seven yards in the second half, as opposed to five for negative 15 yards in the first half.

    The Redskins appeared to be about to get something going at the start of the second half, despite a deep pass on the first play failing to hit its mark.  On second and third down, Miley went to work and gained nine total yards, setting up fourth and one from the Redskin 33.  Harig chose to gamble on the play, and senior Matthew Wallace came out of the wishbone formation to fall forward for a three-yard gain.

    The Loudon offense pushed the ball five more yards to its own 41, but the Boyd defense forced a punt from there.

    The Bucs were forced into a punt on their next drive, giving the ball back to Loudon at its own 32, but the host offense was once again stymied after threatening.  After driving to the Boyd 25 yard line, Harig again chose to take a chance on fourth and four, but this time it didn't pay off.  Johnson tried to find Keenan Hawkins on the outside, but underthrew his target and the ball returned to Boyd late in the third.

    The Buccaneers were once again forced to punt, but again Loudon failed to convert a fourth and short.  This time, the Redskins drove to the 50, before being forced into the fourth down decision.  On fourth and one, the Redskin offense once again lined up in the wishbone, but Barr was stuffed for a loss of one and Boyd took back over.

    The Bucs took possession on the Loudon 49 with 10:38 left to play and had the goal of adding to the total on their mind.  A drawn-out seven play drive moved the Buccaneers to the Loudon nine with just over seven minutes to play. 

    On fourth and six, Reynolds chose to send out the field goal unit to extend the advantage to 10.  Lockert's field goal was blocked, though, giving Loudon another gasp.

    A Johnson pass to Lee Poynter was the only positive for Loudon on the drive, as the Redskins were yet again forced to punt the football away.

    Boyd was able to eat three minutes from the clock before being forced to give the ball back to Loudon, which the Bucs did with a punt to the Redskin 20.

    At this point, the hosts were in full passing mode, hoping for the late comeback.  Johnson completed his first three passes, moving the ball to the 34 and then he scrambled nearly to the 40.  Three straight incompletions sealed the fate of the Redskins, though, as Boyd ran the clock under a minute and a final desperation drive by Loudon covered just 18 yards.

    Loudon finished the game with 32 yards rushing and 115 yards through the air.  The Buccaneers countered this with 154 yards on the ground and 87 passing. 

    Johnson finished the day 14 for 28 for 115 yards and two interceptions.  Miley ended the game with nine carries for 16 yards.

    The Redskins (6-3, 5-0) will finish up the regular season with, perhaps, the toughest game of the season – a trip to Region 2(2A) rival Alcoa.  The two teams are unbeaten in region play and will fight for the top berth in the region Thursday night.

    Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.
     
     
    Loudon vs. Oliver Springs '08
    After Slow Start, Redskins Cruise to Victory
    by Brittany Davis - Source: News Hearld
    October 19, 2008
    On the first cold night of the season, the Redskins got off to a cold start, but quickly turned on the heat to come away with a 42-0 win at Region 2(2A) foe Wartburg. Loudon got off to a rough start on the offensive front as its first drive ended with an interception.  The defense got its job done, though, as they made a goal line stand and denied Wartburg six. The Redskins moved the ball well on their second drive, gaining yardage from their own 28 to the Wartburg 18 – largely behind tailback D'Andre Miley carrying the ball 17 yards and QB Wade Plemons finding Devan Grissom for nine yards.  After a quarterback keeper, the Redskins fumbled the ball at the 18-yard line and the Bulldogs took over.

    Once again Loudon's defense stepped up and kept Wartburg moving backward deep in its own territory.  The Bulldogs were called for holding in the end zone, which gave the Redskins a safety and their first points of the night. Up 2-0, Loudon got the ball back midway through the second quarter and once again started the offensive attack with Miley.

    On second down and five, Plemons ran the ball to pick up the first down.  The Redskins got penalties called and were at a second and 23 when Miley picked up five yards.  Then Plemons found Matthew Wallace for a first down at the Wartburg 26. From there Miley went back to work getting the ball down to the two-yardline.  Tyler Barr then punched it in for Loudon to go up 8-0 after the failed extra point.

    The visiting defense held the Bulldogs to a three and out with the Redskins getting the ball back with 1:55 left in the half.  Brandon Johnson found Keenan Hawkins for a first down at the Bulldog 27-yardline.  Johnson then went back to Hawkins, who got out of bounds at the 21.  Back to the air again, Johnson found Wallace to get inside the 10 for a first and goal from the eight. A Johnson pass to Lee Poynter earned a pick up of two and then, on a scramble, Johnson found the end zone for the touchdown from six yards out.  The Redskins went for two, and Plemons found Aaron Anderson in the end zone to send Loudon to halftime leading 16-0.

    Loudon's defense hit the field first in the second half and on the second play, Tyler Barr had an interception.  It was returned for a TD, but that was negated by a block in the back penalty.
    Unphased by the penalty, it only took two plays for the Redskin offense to get into the end zone from the seven.  Plemons picked up three yards before Wallace found paydirt from the four. Espinoza's PAT was good and the Redskins were up 23-0. The defense held up once more and gave the ball back to the Loudon offense in excellent field position. Loudon's Johnson found Hawkins for a 16-yard pick up.  Then Miley got the call and took the ball in for a touchdown from 19 yards out.  Espinoza added the point after to increase the Redskin lead to 30-0.

    The defense came up with another big play as Wallace intercepted a Wartburg pass at the 20.  He took it down to the 10, setting up first and goal. It took Miley two tries from there, but he got in for six.  The point after was no good but Loudon was up 36-0 and the mercy rule was in effect. Loudon's offense ate up most of the clock in the fourth quarter and, with 1:40 left to play, Jake Brown took off from his own 20-yard line for an 80-yard touchdown run.  The Redskins took a knee on the two-point conversion and let the clock expire. Loudon took home win six on the season and are now 5-0 in region play.  The Redskins (6-2, 5-0) take on Boyd Buchanan Friday night for homecoming. 

    Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.
     
    Miley shines as Redskins overcome Bobcats 48-6

    by Brittany Davis - Source: News Hearld

    October 12, 2008

    Tailback D'Andre Miley led the Loudon Redskins to a 48-6 Region 2(2A) win Friday night at Oliver Springs as he reached the end zone three times in the contest.

    The Redskins (5-2, 4-0) got things off to a very good start early, driving 65 yards for the opening score.  On the first play of the drive, quarterback Brandon Johnson found Devan Grissom for a 13-yard pick up.  Then he found Lee Poynter for another 20-yard gain to go into Oliver Springs territory.  From there Miley took over, and on third and two took the ball to pay dirt from 17 yards out.  Carlos Espinoza added the point after and the Redskins were up 7-0.

    Both teams traded out possessions before the Redskins were able to put up more points. On Loudon's third drive, it was penalized twice to make it first and 20, but it didn't matter as the Redskin offense finally got going.  Johnson found Poynter once again for two six-yard gains.  Then he went back to Grissom to pick up the first down at the 43-yard line.  Miley then took the ball and went 57 yards for the TD.  Espinoza added the PAT and Loudon went up 14-0.

    To start the second quarter, the LHS defense once again pulled out the stops and got the ball back for the offense to try to put more points on the scoreboard. After a bad handoff on first down the Redskins got things together.  Wade Plemons came in at quarterback and took the ball 45 yards on a keeper to get into the end zone.  The extra point was no good, but Loudon still had the lead 20-0.

    The Redskins turned the ball over on its next possession and the Bobcats took full advantage of the mistake. Oliver Springs pounded the ball on the ground before QB C.J. Pointer found Jonathan Thornton for the touchdown.  The PAT was no good and the Bobcats began to close the gap at 20-6.
    Loudon closed out the half with an answer, when Luke Newman recovered a blocked punt and took the ball in for seven.  Espinoza added the point after and the Redskins were up 27-6 at the half.

    The visitors took their first offensive series of the third quarter to pay dirt.  It all started with Keenan Hawkins returning the punt to the Bobcat 23 yard line.  Loudon was then assessed a holding penalty, but Johnson found Matthew Wallace for the 28-yard TD reception.  Espinoza added the extra point and the Redskins extended the lead to 34-6.

    Loudon took its next offensive series for, what else, another touchdown.  It started with a quarterback keep by Plemons that went 22 yards.  Then Miley rushed 44 yards for seven at the 5:15 mark.  Espinoza added the PAT and the Redskins were up 41-6.

    From there on out the clock kept running as Loudon was up by more than 35 points.  The Redskins tried to run the clock out by handing the ball to Jake Brown, and by the end he had a four-yard touchdown.  Espinoza's point after was good and Loudon took home win number five for the year.

    The Redskins will travel to Wartburg Friday night and, with a win, can wrap up at least second place in the region.  Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.
    Redskins roll to 30-14 win over Rockwood

    by Sammie Dunlap - Source: News Hearld

    October 4, 2008

    Coming off the bye week, the Loudon Redskins were a bit slow to get going, but opened the flood gates quickly to cruise to a 30-14 win over Region 2(2A) rival Rockwood Friday night at Dukes Field.

    The Redskins (4-2, 3-0) had to overcome an early mistake when, on a punt attempt during the opening drive, the snap sailed over punter Keenan Hawkins' head. 

    The Tigers' Garrett Raby recovered the poor snap in the end zone for the opening score of the game.  The point after was true, putting the visitors up 7-0 early.

    On the next drive, tailback D'Andre Miley fumbled on the second play.  The Loudon defense held, though, forcing a Rockwood punt.

    "We had a bad start, but with good defensive play we managed to turn it around," said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig of the early mistakes.

    After the opening miscues, the Redskins took control the remainder of the game as they scored the next 30 points. The first score came on an 11-play drive that was capped by a one-yard run by Tyler Barr.  A bad snap on the extra point attempt kept Loudon down 7-6, though.

    Hawkins made a play on defense on the next drive, intercepting an errant Rockwood pass and returning it to the Tiger 20.  Four plays later, Wade Plemons hooked up with Hawkins for the touchdown.  The special teams continued to struggle, as the PAT was blocked to keep the margin at 12-7.

    After a three-and-out, Loudon nearly had a special teams score, but the Jeff Nichols TD was called back on a hold. Four plays later, though, Barr punched it in from the one.  The Redskins turned to the two-point conversion this time and Plemons found Devan Grissom in the end zone to extend the lead to 20-7.
    After yet another Tiger punt, the Redskins hit paydirt with 1:41 left in the half.  Miley found the end zone this time on a 13-yard run.  The point after was true, pushing the Loudon lead to 27-7.
    Scoring was limited in the second half, as Miley set up Loudon for its only score with a 59-yard dash.  Espinoza followed the play with a 33-yard field goal to put the Redskins up 30-7.

    One final TD by the Tigers in the fourth cemented the final tally. The Redskins will seek more region success Friday when they visit Oliver Springs.  Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.
    Redskins vs. Rockwood
     
    Redskins vs. CAK '08
    Dominant Redskin defense leads to two-score win

    by Dewey Morgan, Source: News-Herald

    Sept. 19, 2008

    In a season of ups and downs, the Loudon defense led the Redskins up the hill Friday night on the way to a 28-14 Loudon victory over Sweetwater on Dukes Field.

    The Redskins, coming off a somewhat stunning loss to Greenback last week, took on the Region 3(2A) rival Wildcats with a 2-2 record and a still inexperienced squad.  The Redskin defense took a stand, though, allowing just seven points to Sweetwater in the first 45 minutes of game time.  “When we come to play, we can be a pretty decent team,” said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig. He said the team needed to be in the right mindset to reach its full potential and added they clearly were Friday night.  “This is a mental game,” he explained.  “When you're ready to play, the physical talent will take care of itself.  We haven't been ready every game this year and our record reflects that.  We've got some kids growing up and becoming experienced and when they figure out how to play this game at this level, I think we can win some games.”

    Loudon may be just 3-2 overall, but the win improved the Redskins' record inside the region to 2-0.
    The game itself was a tough, physical contest between two teams who love to run the football.  Knowing this, Harig had his team prepared.  “We worked all week on their run game and I thought our kids played hard and did a good job gang tackling.” The Redskins opened the defensive struggle with a strong offensive drive.  The methodical drive lasted 10 plays and covered 73 yards before Tyler Barr finally punched in the touchdown from a yard out.  Carlos Espinoza nailed the extra point and Loudon held an early 7-0 advantage.

    A series of errors followed as Sweetwater's opening drive ended with Tyler Richesin firing an interception to Devan Grissom down the right sideline.  The first play of Loudon's drive, though, D'Andre Miley lost the handle on the ball and Sweetwater scooped it up at Loudon's 32.  The Wildcats couldn't do anything with the football, though, as Richesin tossed his second pick of the night four plays into the drive.  Luke Newman grabbed this INT at the Redskins' 24.

    Loudon once again commenced eating clock and driving down the field through the first quarter and into the second.  The Wildcats ended the host drive at the Sweetwater 22, though, as a fourth down pass attempt by Wade Plemons was dropped by Josh Berry. The visitors took full advantage of this newfound opportunity, as Sammy Blomstrom took the misdirection handoff and rumbled 79 yards for the score.  Ross Houston's PAT  was true and with 9:42 left in the half Sweetwater knotted the game at seven.

    The teams traded possessions after that, but Loudon got the advantage as a Keenan Hawkins return put Loudon at the Sweetwater 27.  Five plays later, Matthew Wallace took the handoff out of the wishbone formation and pounded into the end zone.  Espinoza once again knocked the extra point through and the Redskins held a 14-7 lead with 2:41 remaining in the half. Neither team could put together a drive the remainder of the half and the hosts took their seven-point advantage to the locker rooms.

    Harig said he noticed something Sweetwater didn't in the first half and used it to open his offense up a bit in the second half – he found that the middle of the field was wide open.  “We saw some coverages they were in and through our motion game they weren't adjusting and that was a weakness in their defense.  We took advantage of that.”

    After a three-and-out opened the second half, Loudon showed its new dominance of the middle of the field.  Three straight passes opened the first Redskin drive of the half and two of them were to the middle of the field.  Quarterback Brandon Johnson missed on his first throw down the right sideline, but connected with Wallace on a middle slant and then with Hawkins on a fly route down the inside of the hashmark.  The completion moved the ball to the Sweetwater 13 and, three plays later, Barr punched the ball in from the three.  Espinoza added the extra point and Loudon extended its advantage to an insurmountable 21-7 margin. The scoring slowed considerably from there, as Loudon focused on eating clock and Sweetwater couldn't penetrate the stout Redskin defense.  Finally, with 3:52 left in the game, Loudon plunged in the dagger.

    On third and five from the Sweetwater 45, Miley took the handoff from Johnson, found a seam and turned on the jets into the end zone.  Espinoza added the PAT and Loudon led in dominant fashion, 28-7. The Wildcats tacked on one final score, but Wallace grabbed the onside kick and Loudon ran out the final seconds from the clock.

    The Redskins (3-2, 2-0) will have a bye Friday night and Harig is pleased with it.  “It's coming at a great time,” the coach confirmed.  “To come where it's at, our kids can recharge their batteries and we can look forward to the second half of the year when we've got four out of five region games.”


    The first of those games will come Friday, Oct. 3 at home against Rockwood.  Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.

    Greenback Stuns Loudon

    by Dewey Morgan, Source: News-Herald

    Sept. 12, 2008

    Intra-county matchups always have a little extra sizzle to them, both teams generally enter with a little more intensity. Friday night, there was even more buzz than most intra-county games and Greenback Head Coach Brent Kilpatrick had an idea why. “I'll just be honest – we expected to win tonight,” the coach exclaimed.  “Loudon's got a great team, but we felt we could beat them this year.” And beat them the Class A Cherokees did. When Greenback quarterback Bunkie Vanskiver, the offensive star of the contest, fell on Loudon's desperation onside kick, it was apparent to everyone in the stadium. For the first time in school history, the Greenback Cherokees had defeated the Loudon Redskins 26-23.

    Coming into the game as heavy underdogs, the Cherokees were fully aware of the highly lopsided defeats they had received from the Class 2A Redskins. The Loudon players, it seems, were aware also, as Head Coach Jeff Harig's fears of a lack of focus were realized.  “We weren't mentally focused and their kids made plays and ours didn't.  They outplayed us, outcoached us and I give them credit.” The Redskins took the ball first, in an apparent attempt to quickly quell the energy swelling up among the Greenback faithful. This wasn't the case, however, as the Loudon offense was forced into a three and out and punted the ball to Greenback.

    The fired-up ‘Kees took possession at their own 21 and, in nine plays, marched to the end zone.

    It wasn't an easy path, as the Loudon defense forced a decision on fourth and four from the visiting 38.

    Cherokee offensive coordinator Greg Ryan, true to his aggressive nature, chose to go for it early.

    The decision worked as Vanskiver flipped the ball out to senior Chase Vogt on a wide receiver screen and Vogt fought his way to a first down.

    Three plays later, Greenback was on the board first on a 28-yard scramble by Vanskiver.

    The extra point was blocked, but the Cherokees struck first, 6-0. Undaunted, the Loudon offense took the field and put together a very lengthy drive.

    Beginning from their own 31, the Redskins drove 43 yards in 17 plays and ate 8:46 off the clock. The Cherokee defense made a stand on its end of the field, though, as a fourth down pass from Brandon Johnson to Keenan Hawkins was broken up by Vogt. The Greenback offense took possession of the ball at its own 26 and used some trickery to find the end zone this time. After moving to the Loudon 49 in four plays, Ryan dug into the playbook and found a play that caught Loudon off guard.

     

    Vanskiver dropped back and, much like he had done numerous times already in the game, tossed a screen pass out to Vogt. Instead of running with the ball, though, the senior dropped back and fired across the field to a wide-open Daniel Willis.  The tailback caught the pass and streaked through the green grass to paydirt.

    The ‘Kees attempted a two-point conversion, but Vanskiver's pass was batted down by Devan Grissom and the Loudon defense held Greenback to a 12-0 advantage. Loudon took the ball this time and the coaches turned to the best weapon they have, senior tailback D'Andre Miley. The senior touched the ball on six of the seven plays run and capped the 64-yard drive with a 22-yard scamper. Carlos Espinoza nailed the PAT and Loudon closed the gap to 12-7.

    The Greenback offense continued its success through the air, though, as Vanskiver moved the ‘Kees 60 yards in seven plays to the Loudon 15.

    Possibly the senior's only mistake came on the final play of the drive, though, as he tried to get the ball to Vogt, but had it tipped and intercepted by Loudon's Matthew Wallace.

    The Loudon offense failed to pass the 50, though, and the teams headed to the locker room with five points seperating them.

    Loudon seemed to get things back under control after the break, as the Redskin defense stuffed the Cherokee offense for a three-and-out and the Loudon offense cashed in.

    Starting from their own 43, Miley led the Redskins down the field in seven plays to the Greenback 10.

    The host defense held firm there, though, and forced an Espinoza field goal.  It was true, and Greenback clung to a 12-10 lead.

    No intimidation showed from the ‘Kees on the ensuing drive as they marched 63 yards in 10 plays and a Vanskiver to Vogt 15-yard slant pattern capped the scoring drive.

    Jeremy Miller's point after made it through and the hosts upped their lead to 19-10.

    The teams traded possessions before the inevitable occured – a big play from Miley.

    Beginning at their own 45 early in the fourth, sophomore Wade Plemons picked up six yards for the Redskin offense and then Miley evaded numerous tacklers in the middle of the field and burst out for a 49-yard TD strike.  Espinoza's PAT cut the ‘Kee lead back to two at 19-17.

    The ‘Kees all but wrapped up the game on the next drive, though, as the offense marched 82 yards in 10 plays and fullback Jeff Harris plunged in from a yard out to cap the drive.  Miller nailed the extra point and Greenback held a 26-17 lead with 7:25 to play and enjoyed every bit of the momentum.

    With a raucous crowd doing its best to slow them, the Loudon offense bogged down at midfield on the next drive and a fourth down scramble from Johnson came up well short – giving the ball back to the ‘Kees.

    Greenback burned four minutes from the clock, but couldn't hammer the final nail in the coffin.

    Loudon took possession at its own four yard line and the passing game brought the Redskins six points closer.

    After moving the ball to midfield, Johnson dropped back and found Wallace streaking down the left sideline.  The receiver caught the ball and found his way to the end zone.  Espinoza's PAT bounced off the right upright, though, leaving the score 26-23.

    The senior kicker then attempted an onside kick as the final hope for Loudon.  The ball rolled free for the necessary 10 yards, but Vanskiver fell on it to clinch the Cherokee win.

    The senior QB finished the game with 204 passing yards and 116 on the ground.  "He's a playmaker, that's all you need to say," Kilpatrick said of his QB.  Harig also spoke of Vanskiver's big game saying he "made plays all night long.  We tried to get to him, but we couldn't get to him."

    Miley led the Loudon offense with 183 yards and two TDs.  "We knew that we could do some things in the running game," Harig explained of Miley's success.

    As for moving on, both teams are facing very different situations.  "It's a big deflator," Harig said.  "On film, I knew they were good and I knew it was going to be a challenge, but I felt that we would be OK to make the plays we needed, but unfortunately we didn't."  Kilpatrick, on the other hand, is hoping for this win to vault his team forward.  "I think confidence-wise this is going to help.  If we come out and play like this every Friday night, we have a chance to do some good things this year."

    The ‘Kees (3-0) will travel to Harriman Friday night and the Redskins (2-2) will look to rebound at home against Sweetwater.

    Both games are set to begin at 7:30 p.m.

    Battle of the Bridge 2008

    Vengeance comes for Loudon in win over CAK

    by Brittany Davis, Source: News-Herald

    Sept. 5, 2008
    Photos by: Sammie Dunlap

    The Loudon Redskins (2-1) took to the field Friday night as underdogs to their Region 2(2A) rivals, Christian Academy of Knoxville (1-1).  The Redskins had home field advantage and something to prove – they were not going to let the critics be right.  By the end of the game, the Redskins had avenged their losses to CAK from last season with a 23-7 win.

    The Redskins took their opening possession from their own 26-yard line.  On the first play, Brandon Johnson found Keenan Hawkins for a one-yard gain.  Then Johnson found Lee Poynter on a slant for a first down at the 38-yard line. Wade Plemons came in at quarterback to keep the Warriors' defense on its heels and kept the ball as he picked up another Loudon first down.  D'Andre Miley picked up five yards on a carry and then, on second and five, Johnson found Matthew Wallace for a 39-yard touchdown.  The point after was blocked, but the Redskins were up 6-0.

    The defense stopped the Warriors short of the goal line on CAK's second series and Hawkins blocked a 41-yard field goal attempt.  Wallace recovered the ball for Loudon and took it out to the 45 but the offense couldn't get going and had to punt. The defense once again stepped up and forced a punt, which the Redskin special teams unit came down on hard.  The Redskins got what they wanted as the punter shanked it and netted a five-yard punt.

    The offense took advantage of the great field position, as Plemons came in to pick up a first down.  He then pitched to Wallace on the option for another Redskin first down.  Loudon marched down to the 11-yard line and Plemons kept the ball and took it into pay dirt.  Carlos Espinoza added the PAT and Loudon was up 13-0. Each team traded possessions after that, but it was the Big Red defense that got the best of the Warriors.  Richard Butkus had a big hit on Michael Fromke causing a fumble.  Luke Newman scooped up the ball and rumbled 30-yards for the TD.  Espinoza's point after was good and the Redskins were up 20-0 going into halftime. The third quarter was scoreless as each team traded punts.

    The fourth started with the Redskins getting the ball on a CAK punt.  Miley got the handoff on a second and seven from Loudon's own 27-yard line and took to the races.  He was eventually caught by the shirttail at the 23-yard line of the Warriors.  Tyler Barr carried the ball seven yards and Miley was able to pick up the first down.  The Redskins got a first and goal at the nine but kept going backwards.  Finally Espinzoa's 29-yard field goal was good and Loudon extended its lead to 23-0.

    With two minutes left to play the Redskins put in their second team defense, but the Warriors left in their starters.  So Fromke was able to find Taylor Moran for CAK's only TD.  Matthew Warren added the point after, but Loudon was still up 23-7. The Redskins got the ball back on the onside kick and ran the clock out for their second victory of the season. “The key to the win was a great team effort and the defense kept them from making big plays,” said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig after the game. CAK had 252 yards of total offense and the Redskins finished with 256. Loudon was led in rushing by Plemons with 19 carries for 101 yards.  Miley pitched in 41 yards on 13 carries.  Hawkins led in passing with four receptions for 51 yards.

    Loudon (2-1) travels to Greenback (2-0) next Friday to end the county rivalry for the 2008 season.

    Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.

    Redskins claim fourth straight win over Panthers
    Aug. 30, 2008
    by Dewey Morgan, Source: News-Herald

    Many things have changed in the past year, but there's one thing that has remained constant – Loudon's success against its intra-county rival. Two very different teams took the field Friday night, Loudon attempting to repeat a duo of strong seasons and Lenoir City trying to carry the momentum from its first win in 18 games. The end result, though, was the fourth straight Redskin victory over the Panthers – this time 30-7. The two teams were very competitive early, even entering halftime with Loudon hanging on to a 17-7 advantage.

    The Redskins were dominant in the final half, though, securing the victory yet again. “I thought our defense was the difference,” said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig. “I thought our secondary played well . . . and they were really trying to test us in the secondary.” As for the Panther side, Head Coach Mike Zeller spoke of a team that needed more improvement. “It was just one thing after another. Just a bad game all around,” he said.  “We had so many mental mistakes, I don't know where to start.” The game didn't start out so badly for the Panthers, though, as they gave the ball to Loudon to open the game and stopped the Class 2A school for a three and out. The Redskin defense stepped up and held the Class 4A offense to the same fate, though. After the trade of failed possessions, Loudon put together a drive that would dent the scoreboard. A 10-play, 55-yard drive that ate 5:42 off the clock culminated in a three yard run by Matthew Wallace for the touchdown. Most of the yardage was gained by starting tailback D'Andre Miley, though, as he accounted for all but 13 of the yards. After senior Carlos Espinoza nailed the extra point, Loudon held a 7-0 lead. The Panthers made sure their rival didn't pull too far ahead, though, as it took just three plays for LC to tie the game. After a couple of plays that lost three yards, senior QB Matt Gentry found an open Derek Pratt streaking across the field on a slant pattern. The junior grabbed the ball and blazed 69 yards to paydirt. Daniel Cook's PAT was true and the Panthers tied the game late in the first quarter.

    The Redskins came right back with an answer, as they put together an eight-play, 60-yard scoring drive. Helped by a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on Lenoir City that turned a third down into a first, the Redskins capped their drive on a draw up the middle by backup quarterback Wade Plemons. The sophomore, who rotated with senior Brandon Johnson on a pre-planned basis, ran a draw up the middle  and had nothing but daylight for 21 yards. Asked about the QB rotation, Harig explained, “Wade gives us a dimension with the option game that Brandon does not.  We like the way Brandon manages the game and his demeanor in the huddle and Wade can come in and spell him and give us another dimension.” Espinoza once again drilled the extra point and Loudon held a 14-7 lead midway through the second. Neither offense found much footing against the opposing defense the remainder of the half, except for one last scoring drive by Loudon.

    After a series that saw Loudon fail on a fake punt and then Lenoir City giving the ball back on the next play due to a fumbled handoff, the Redskins tacked on three more points. A 43-yard Miley run set up the field goal attempt by Espinoza and, despite making things extremely interesting, the kicker converted the three-point play and the visitors headed to halftime up 10. Coming out of the break, the Panthers began to put together a successful drive and appeared to be near getting back in the game – before disaster struck in the form of a red and white clad Wallace. The junior stepped in front of a Gentry pass thrown to the right hashmark, caught it and raced 60 yards for a score that deflated the home crowd. Espinoza missed the PAT this time, leaving the score at 23-7. The next offensive drive for the Panthers saw the more mobile Cody Harvey enter the game at quarterback, and he produced a long drive.

    Under Harvey's leadership, the Panthers drove down to the Loudon 15 before the drive stalled. The Panthers attempted a fake field goal from there, but holder Brandon Rutherford was unable to find any room to run and was promptly taken down by a duo of Redskins. The LC defense held on the ensuing drive, forcing a Loudon punt.  Even then, though, bad luck struck the Panthers. Harvey fielded the punt from Keenan Hawkins and was leveled by a Redskin defender.  The ball sprung free and was recovered by Wallace, but Harvey was hurt. “He had a bad cramp there at the end,” said Zeller of Harvey.  “He was doing a lot of running.”

    Loudon turned that turnover into more points, as Johnson capped the drive with a one-yard sneak and Espinoza sealed the final score with his fourth PAT. Gentry finished the game 8 of 22 for 130 yards, a touchdown and an interception. Miley led the Loudon offense with 139 yards on 25 carries. The Redskin ground game carried the offense, gaining 218 yards total along with three TDs. Pratt finished the game for LC with 96 yards on three catches and a score.

    The Panthers (1-1) will remain at home Friday to face Powell while Loudon (1-1) returns to Dukes Field to face CAK.

     

    Redskins drop season opener to tough,
    experienced McMinn Central squad

    8-22-08
    by Dewey Morgan, Source: News-Herald

    Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig called his team a “work in progress” after Friday night's opening contest and it certainly showed.  The Redskins hosted McMinn Central in the season opener and fell into an early 34-0 hole before ultimately falling 34-13 on Dukes Field. The Wade Plemons-led Loudon offense (senior Brandon Johnson was still nursing a shoulder separation) took the ball on the opening drive, but quickly punted after a three and out.  A very short punt by Keenan Hawkins gave the ball to McMinn Central at the Loudon 33 and the Chargers capitalized on the good field position.

    The Redskin defense didn't make things easy for the Class 3A squad, though, as the Chargers ran 10 plays and ticked 6:17 off the clock before scoring.  The lengthy drive finally culminated in a score when McMinn Central's Josh Moss took a handoff and beat the Loudon defense to the right edge for a 10-yard score.  Jamon Godfrey's extra point was true and the Chargers took the early 7-0 lead. Loudon came out firing on the second drive, as Plemons connected with Hawkins 33 yards downfield on the first play.  From the visitors' 41 yard line, Plemons then scrambled 11 yards for another first down to the McMinn Central 30.  The drive stalled from there, though, as Loudon only moved backwards and was forced to punt.

    The Chargers once again put together a touchdown drive, but yet again the Loudon defense made life difficult on the way.  It took the visitors 12 plays to score, and they were helped along the way by a Redskin roughing the punter halfway through. The Chargers accumulated three first downs as they matriculated their way down the field, but gained a chunk of 35 yards on one play when Aaron Walker took a reverse and streaked 25 yards downfield.  A face mask penalty on Loudon marched the ball another 10 yards across the grass and set the visitors up with a first down on Loudon's seven. One play later, Branden Simpson took the handoff to the left and fought his way to paydirt.  Godfrey barely crept the kick over the crossbar and the Chargers saw their lead grow to 14-0 midway through the second quarter.

    The Redskin offense showed some life again on their third drive, as a Plemons to Matthew Wallace connection earned them their third first down of the game.  The drive appeared to be over once the Redskins drove to the McMinn Central 45 and were faced with a fourth down, but Harig took a chance.  On fourth and seven, the punt team came on but the snap went directly to Plemons, the upback on the play.  He was tackled for no gain, apparently ending the drive again, but a personal foul face mask was called on the visitors, setting Loudon up with a fresh set of downs on the Charger 30.

    The Redskins couldn't do anything with the new life, though, running into a three and out and punting. The Chargers enjoyed their first short drive of the game, moving 82 yards in just six plays for the third score of the contest. The final scoring drive of the first half was culminated when quarterback Zac Rayl hooked up with receiver Jarrel Harrison for a 70-yard score.  Godfrey once again made the extra point interesting, but nailed it to send the game to halftime with the Chargers up 21-0.

    Some confusion opened up the second half, as the Redskins received the ball once again to open the half – despite getting it to start the game as well.  As it turned out, the Chargers chose to kick on the opening coin flip, instead of choosing to defer.  Therefore, the decision was left up to Harig in the second half and he chose to receive. It didn't turn our well for Loudon anyway, though, as the kickoff was fumbled and the Chargers fell on the loose pigskin. This miscue led to a six-play, 17-yard scoring drive by McMinn Central, capped off by a three-yard scamper by Maury Ragland.  Godfrey continued to flirt with the goalposts, but made the PAT to extend the advantage to 28-0. The Redskin offense continued to find problems putting a drive together, and punted after a quick three and out.

    The Loudon defense, though, continued its strong play forcing the Chargers into a punt formation after a three and out.  The Chargers, though, ran a fake of their own and it succeeded this time.  Rayl took the direct snap and burst through the middle of the line for 32 yards and a first down.  Two plays later, the Chargers moved the final five yards for the touchdown as Walker punched it in.  Godfrey, playing with fire all night, finally missed an extra point to keep the score at 34-0.

    The Loudon offense finally began its progression on the next drive.  Starting from his own 20, tailback D'Andre Miley ended a game of frustrations with a 38-yard bolt out to the McMinn Central 42.  The senior was hit late by the Chargers' Shane Moses for one personal foul penalty, and then the referees charged another one to Moses, apparently for arguing after the play was over.

    The duo of penalties moved the ball all the way down to the visitors' 12 and Miley took the handoff on the next play around the left side and into the end zone.  Carlos Espinoza tacked on the PAT and Loudon moved within 34-7. The Chargers continued to implode on their next drive, giving the ball back to Loudon after a three and out.  Hawkins got the Loudon fans on their feet once more on the punt, returning it 17 yards to the Charger 35. Miley continued to carry the offensive load, turning a third and 12 into a first down with a 15-yard scamper before Plemons found Hawkins on the left sideline for 10 yards and a first down. The Redskins appeared ready to cut the deficit to 21 after a Matthew Wallace run put the ball at the one, but the Charger defense held strong and forced the Redskins to turn the ball over on downs.

    The McMinn Central offense continued to sputter, though, as the Redskin defense stuffed two straight run plays and then forced a turnover.  On third and 10 from the one, Rayl dropped to pass and was forced to step up in the pocket.  From there, he tried to fire the ball across the middle, but a Loudon lineman got his hand on the ball and the duck fell right into the hands of Jordan Purdy. The Redskin linebacker took the ball to the one, but failed to cross the goalline.  The Loudon offense did eventually break the line, though, as Plemons snuck in from a yard out to cement the final score.

    After the game, Harig said he felt overall the defense “didn't play bad,” but that the team still had some growing to do.  “We had kids in position to make plays.  When we learn to make those plays, we'll have a chance at success this year. The coach added, “Our challenge as players and coaches is to keep striving to get better.” They'll have to find a way to get better quick, though, as a potentially improved Lenoir City Panther team awaits them Friday night for the annual “Battle of the Bridge.”  Harig said he didn't think this loss would impact his team negatively for the upcoming pivotal contest.  “I think it only gives us confidence.  For us to come out and compete the way we did in the second half and not give up – I think it shows we have character.” The game kicks off at 7:30 p.m. in Lenoir City.

    Jamborees kick off high school football season
    Aug. 15, 2008
    by Dewey Morgan, Source: News-Herald

    The 2008 high school football season kicked off for all three Loudon County football teams Friday night as, all across Tennessee, teams took part in their preseason jamborees. Greenback visited Heritage High School and faced off with William Blount. Behind touchdowns by senior quarterback Bunkie Vanskiver and fellow senior receiver Chris Sabo, the 'Kees chopped down the much larger Class 5A Governors 13-7. "To come out and play like this, I think, will give us a lot of confidence," said Greenback Head Coach Brent Kilpatrick. The Redskins hosted their own jamboree and took on Tellico.
    Both teams struggled to find consistent offense and the quarter ended in a scoreless tie.  "Good night, good weather, good crowd, nobody got hurt, and the kids played hard," said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig.
    Taking part in the jamboree at Loudon, Lenoir City faced off with Polk County. The Panthers ran six offensive plays on the way to a  7-0 defeat.
    "We've got to fix some things and get better," said Lenoir City Head Coach Mike Zeller. The 'Kees will take Week 0 off before heading to Hancock County Aug. 29. Loudon will open its home slate with a contest against McMinn Central and Lenoir City will hit the road for a date with Karns. All games are scheduled to start at 7 p.m.

     

     
    2007 Season Headlines
     

    McNew's TD helps Loudon avoid shutout against Alcoa
    By: Dewey Morgan

    Source: Loudon County News-Herald
    11-07-2007

    A one-yard touchdown run by senior quarterback Blake McNew late in the fourth kept the Redskins from suffering their first shutout of the season Friday night as they fell to Region 2(2A) champion Alcoa 42-6 in Loudon on senior night. The Redskins were without speedy tailback D'Andre Miley – who aggravated a knee injury during warm-ups - and senior starting running back Tyler Campbell was hobbled with an ankle injury. “Any time you play a team like this you want a spark, you want something that's going to give you hope and give you something to believe in. Without our two big-play guys, you lose hope and you've got to do it the hard way – and that means mash them,” said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig. The Redskins did mash the Tornadoes as Tyler Barr rushed 19 times for 135 yards. He had long runs of 42 and 39 yards. As a team, the Redskins ran the ball 38 of their 54 total plays.

    The speed of Alcoa was just too much, though, as quarterback Randall Cobb needed just four carries to eclipse the century mark rushing. The Tornadoes also victimized the Loudon secondary, when Cobb hooked up with Sam Thompson on two deep completions down the sideline. The first went for a 50-yard touchdown and the second was a 42-yard strike. “The bottom line is, you can't simulate the speed they can put on you,” Harig said. The opening drive for the Redskins began well as Campbell took the ball three straight times, gaining 21 yards. He fumbled the fourth handoff, though, putting the Redskins in a third and long they couldn't overcome. After the punt, it took Alcoa just four plays to find the end zone.

    Cobb ran the ball twice for 37 yards and tailback Troy Hodge ran once for 12 yards and punched the ball in from seven yards away on his second carry. Derek Brotus nailed the PAT and Alcoa led early 7-0. The next Loudon drive wasn't nearly as successful, as the only play of the three and out that went for positive yardage was a Barr three-yard run.

    Three plays later, the Tornadoes were in the end zone again courtesy of the 50-yard Cobb to Thompson hookup. Brotus again was true on the point after to extend the lead to 14-0. The Redskins finally put together a sustained drive, running 11 plays and eating 5:29 from the clock, but ultimately punted early in the second quarter. On the first play of the next drive, Cobb faked a handoff to Hodge and flew through a hole on the right side 74 yards to paydirt. Brotus again hit the PAT to make the Alcoa lead 21-0. After Loudon ate three more minutes off the clock, the Tornadoes found the end zone again. Following a Loudon punt, the visiting offense strung together seven plays that spanned 75 yards before Cobb rolled to his left and found tight end Tyler Robinson in the end zone for the score. Brotus remained perfect on the night in extra points, extending the advantage to 28-0 with 4:46 to play in the half.

    The final drive of the half for Loudon was the closest it would come to the goal in the opening half. Inspired by a 35-yard completion from McNew to Matthew Wallace, the Redskin offense moved to the Alcoa 27, but a trick play backfired on third and 10. With just over a minute left in the half, Keenan Hawkins received the pitch on a reversed end around and launched the ball deep, just to have it picked off at the two-yard line. The Tornadoes ran out the clock from there to send the game into halftime with the 28-point margin.

    The visitors took the ball out of the break and again, marched right down the field. A four-play, 71-yard drive was capped when Cobb hit Thompson 11 yards downfield for the quick TD. Brotus' extra point put Alcoa up 35-0 and triggered the mercy rule – marking the first time the Redskins were on the wrong side of the new rule this season.

    With the clock continuously running, neither team had many possessions, but both found paydirt. The first score was a 76-yard TD run by Alcoa's Jaron Toney with just under 10 minutes left in the game. Brotus' PAT put the visitors up 42-0. The Redskins avoided the shutout on the next drive as they moved 74 yards in nine plays. Barr opened the possession bouncing a run to the outside and racing 39 yards down the right sideline. The Tornadoes forced Loudon into a fourth and six situation, but a McNew pass forced a pass interference call on Alcoa, setting up first and 10 from the visiting 16. Three plays later from the one, McNew faked a handoff to Barr and shot left through a hole and into the end zone. Carlos Espinoza's PAT strayed wide left, though, to seal the final score. Cobb finished the game completing six of his seven passes for 141 yards and three scores. He also rushed seven times for 107 yards and a TD.

    Hodge got eight touches for 68 yards and a score. Thompson caught four balls for 111 yards and two scores. McNew connected on nine of his 15 attempts for 95 yards. He also carried the ball seven times for four yards and a TD. Campbell gained 25 yards on 11 carries. Both were playing their final regular season game at Dukes Field. The Tornadoes outgained Loudon's offense 447 total yards to 259 total yards. As a team Alcoa rushed for 306 yards and passed for 141. The Loudon ground game churned out 164 yards and the passing game added 95. With the loss and a CAK victory over Rockwood, the Redskins (8-2, 4-2) enter the playoffs as their region's three seed. Their first round game will be Friday night at CAK.

     

    Behind 27 unanswered points
    By: Brittany Davis
    Source: Loudon County News-Herald
    10-29-2007

    Overcoming a slow start in Chattanooga, Loudon posted 27 unanswered points Friday night to defeat the final non-regional foe of the season, Boyd Buchanan, 27-7. The Redskins went three and out on their first two offensive possessions before Boyd Buchanan got the scoring going. With 5:11 to go in the first quarter, Taylor Gilley went 44 yards on second down to the endzone to pick up six. McCord Bowen connected on the PAT to give Boyd Buchanan the early 7-0 lead.

    The Redskins got the ball back and Blake McNew used his arm to help get their offense going. D'Andre Miley took the first carry of the drive six yards and McNew followed it up by finding Grant Gasper for the first down at the Loudon 35. Once again McNew went to Gasper for the first down grab at the Buccaneer 48. The southpaw then went to Matthew Wallace for a first down at the one-yard line.

    It took two tries for McNew to get the ball into the endzone, but Loudon answered Boyd Buchanan. Carlos Espinoza added the point after to tie the game at seven. The Buccaneers weren't able to score on their next drive as they were hindered by a penalty that forced them to punt. Loudon came back with another score on its first drive of the second quarter. The Redskins picked up a quick first down as McNew took the ball on the quarterback draw. Then Loudon shot itself in the foot, as the Redskins picked up two penalties to start first and 24 on their own 25. Boyd Buchanan bailed Loudon out as the hosts committed a pass interference penalty to give the visitors 15 yards and a first down. McNew took the snap on the next play and ran with it to pick up another Redskin first down, but the drive stalled and Loudon had to line up to punt a few plays later.

    All was set and the Buccaneers went all out for the block, but the snap went to McNew and he picked up the first down and more as he was brought down at the Boyd Buchanan 29. Miley was called upon and, on his last carry, went four yards for the TD. Espinoza added the point after and the Redskins took the lead for good at 14-7. On the following drive, Ben Curtis got a huge interception on the seven-yard line to end the Buccaneer drive and save a touchdown for the Redskins going into halftime.

    The third quarter was a trade off between Loudon and Boyd Buchanan, but the Redskins got the advantage in the end. It all got started with Jake Kleinschmidt blocking a punt for Loudon and giving the ball to the offense on the Buccaneers 15 yard line. Miley rushed twice for 14 yards before Tyler Barr went into paydirt from the one. The PAT was blocked but Loudon was up 20-7.

    Each team traded possessions in the fourth quarter, before the Redskins tacked on their final score. The Loudon drive started at the Boyd Buchanan 41 yard line with Barr picking up six yards on three downs. An offside penalty didn't slow down the offensive attack as McNew came back on fourth and seven to find Wallace for the first down at the 11. After a loss of three, McNew went in for six on the quarterback draw. Espinoza added the extra point and the Redskins sealed the final score. In an odd turn Loudon's leading rusher was its quarterback as McNew rushed for 77 yards on 14 carries. Miley followed with 57 yards on 14 carries and Barr had 33 on 12 rushes.

    Loudon (8-1, 4-1) gets possibly its biggest test of the season Friday in a playoff warmup. The Redskins will host region rival and defending state champion Alcoa.

    Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.

     

    Redskin defense dominant in 30-6 victory over Wartburg
    By: Dewey Morgan
    Source: Loudon County News-Herald
    10-22-2007

    The Loudon defense shined Friday night, allowing only 63 total yards of offense to Wartburg in a 30-6 Homecoming victory. With the win, the Redskins guaranteed themselves a spot in the playoffs. “We knew going in that we had the advantage defensively,” said Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig after the game. “I thought our defensive kids stepped up and were prepared to play. There's going to be some games the rest of this year against some quality opponents that we're going to have to defend the same way.” He added that clinching the playoff spot was “very important,” but added, “After we beat Rockwood, we felt confident that was going to get us into the playoffs.” The Redskins got off to a quick start, holding Wartburg to a three and out on the Bulldogs' first possession and then moving down to score. After the Scottie Phillips punt put the Redskins at their own 27, the Loudon offense found the end zone in three plays.

    A D'Andre Miley three-yard run and then an incomplete Blake McNew pass set up a screen to Miley on the left hashmark. Miley dodged defenders to the right side of the field and then raced 70 yards to the end zone. Carlos Espinoza's extra point was good and the Redskins led 7-0 with 9:30 left in the first. Loudon put together a couple of long drives the remainder of the quarter and into the second, but didn't find the end zone again until late in the second. Harig said he felt his team had some problems focusing early on. “We've got to be more focused and more mature than that. A lot of things go on for homecoming week and the fact that you're playing a team that hasn't won a game yet, all that came into one and that's just not where you want to be.”

    The focus began to come back for the Redskins with just over five minutes to play in the half when, after a bad snap put Wartburg back to its own 20 and set up fourth and 20, a second bad snap past Phillips went into the end zone for a safety to put Loudon up 9-0. On the ensuing kick, Ben Everett picked up a squibber at his own 35 and broke a 65-yard touchdown return down the left sideline. Espinoza nailed the PAT and the Redskin lead extended to 16-0. The first play of the Bulldogs' next drive was an attempted pass by Geoffrey Bangley that was picked off by Keenan Hawkins.

    The Redskins took over at the Wartburg 40 and, nine plays later, Miley punched in his second TD of the night – this one on the ground. Espinoza again nailed the extra point and the hosts led 23-0 heading into halftime. The Loudon defense held the Bulldogs to negative yards of total offense in the first half, allowing negative 13 yards rushing and only 10 yards through the air. The defensive struggle continued into the second half as neither team found the end zone in the third quarter. The teams traded three and outs to start the period, and then both failed to score on sustained drives. The final score of the night for the Redskins came on their opening drive of the fourth quarter. Miley was the catalyst of the drive, touching the ball on six of the nine plays and gaining 34 of the 60 yards. The junior punched the ball in from two yards out and, after another Espinoza extra point, the Redskins led 30-0.

    The Bulldogs finally climbed out of negative numbers on the ground on the next drive as Phillips broke a 57-yard run down to the Loudon four on the second play of the drive. Two plays later, Phillips swept left and into the end zone to end the Redskin shutout hopes and seal the final score. The Redskins finished the game with 207 yards on the ground, 127 of them coming from Miley. McNew finished the game completing half of his 14 passes for 128 yards and a touchdown. The Loudon defense kept Bangley from completing any of his four passes and held his backup, Tyler Trout, to two completions in five attempts for 21 yards. Bangley also had negative 33 yards rushing. Phillips finished the game with 66 yards rushing and a TD. The Redskins (7-1, 4-1) hit the road for the final time in the regular season Friday night when they travel to Chattanooga to face Boyd Buchanan. Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.

     

    Scoring plays pay off big for Loudon
    News Sentinel staff
    Saturday, October 13, 2007

     

    Loudon High School turned big plays into a big victory Friday night. D'Andre Miley rushed for three touchdowns and Blake McNew threw two scoring passes in the Redskins' 49-8 Region 2-2A victory over Oliver Springs. Miley's longest scoring run covered 64 yards for Loudon (6-1, 3-1 Region 2-2A). McNew's eight completions resulted in 202 passing yards. The two TD passes were a 61-yarder to Ben Everett and 44 yards to Gant Gasper. Gasper also scored on a 31-yard run. Jonathan Thornton returned a kickoff 80 yards for a touchdown for Oliver Springs (1-6, 0-3)
    © 2007, Knoxville News Sentinel Co.

     


    Everett and Miley Nominated for
    Defensive and Offensive players of the week

    By Jesse Smithey
    Sunday, October 7, 2007

     

    If 200 yards is the new benchmark for a great offensive performance, then this week's ball-toting nominees for PrepXtra Player of the Week placed themselves in that category.

    Farragut High School running back Andre Sterling, Oak Ridge running back Jared Stephens, Catholic wideout Ryan Walden and Loudon running back D'Andre Miley each surpassed 200 yards of production, and some challenged 300.

    The four nominees for defensive player of the week were: Ben Williford (Rutledge), Alex Roberts (Kingston), Alex Goltry (Bearden) and Ben Everett (Loudon).

    Fans may vote for their choices online at WBIR.com. The winners - the fans' and PrepXtra pros' picks - will be announced on WBIR's 11 p.m. Thursday telecast and in the PrepXtra section of Friday's Knoxville News Sentinel.

    Sterling topped 200 yards for the fourth time in six games this season, rushing for 289 yards Friday night and three touchdowns in a 36-35 win at William Blount.

    Stephens rang up 200 yards for the third time in six games, actually running for 308 yards and four touchdowns against McMinn County Friday.

    Miley notched his season's first 200-yarder with a 214-yard, two-touchdown night against Rockwood.

    And Walden caught six passes for 203 yards and a touchdown in Catholic's win against Anderson County - and on a night when the Irish's run attack was far from par.

    Williford helped Rutledge blank Gibbs with 10 tackles. Everett made 15 tackles - three for loss - and had three quarterback hurries against Rockwood. Goltry was part of Bearden's defensive stand against Science Hill, limiting the Hilltoppers to 57 yards of total offense. Goltry had six tackles, three of which were for loss. And Roberts' 10 tackles and a fumble recovery helped Kingston pitch a shutout against Stone Memorial.

    © 2007, Knoxville News Sentinel Co.

    Strong second half performance
    By: Brittany Davis
    Source: Loudon County News-Herald
    09-24-2007

     

    The Loudon Redskins took to the road Friday night to take on the Sweetwater Wildcats.

    The game started out with a lack luster first half with Sweetwater leading 7-6 at the half, but the second half of the game saw a total turn around with Loudon out doing the Wildcats in every aspect of the game.

    Loudon picked up its first 2A win of the season 30-13 over Sweetwater.

    The first quarter saw each team trading out possessions and it wasn't until the second quarter that each offense found pay dirt.

    On its first offensive series of the game, Loudon's first pass was picked off by Sweetwater's Chris Johnkins. The Redskin defense stepped up and kept the Wildcats in check by making Sweetwater punt.

    After that the action was back and forth, but neither team was able to score.

    The Wildcats were the first to put points on the board. They got the ball on their own 40-yard line with 2:25 left to go in the first quarter. Mitchell Ferguson and Craig Latham saw the first carries of Sweetwater's possession. The Wildcats got the ball down to the 13-yard line with Latham picking up the first down. Latham got the call again to take the ball down to the seven. Then, on second and four, Tyler Richesin found Johnkins for the TD. Ross Houston's point after was good and with 10:50 to go in the second quarter Sweetwater had the lead, 7-0.

    On Loudon's next series, the Redskins had two very costly penalties giving them a first and 37. The Redskins never recovered the yardage and had to punt.

    The defense for Loudon stepped up again, though, and was able to cause a Wildcat fumble that Aaron Anderson picked up and took to the Sweetwater 32.

    From there the offense found a rhythm with D'Andre Miley, who paved the way for Tyler Campbell's five-yard TD. The PAT was no good, but the Redskins cut the lead to one at 7-6 to end the quarter.

    The Redskins came out in the third quarter with a new swagger as, on their first possession of the quarter, Blake McNew found Grant Gasper for a 55-yard touchdown. Carlos Espinoza added the extra point to give Loudon the lead, 13-7.

    Each team fumbled in the next two offensive series, but Sweetwater was able to hang on to Loudon's fumble. In the end Lantham took it 58 yards to pay dirt. The PAT was no good and the game was tied at 13.

    That was enough for the Redskins as, on the kickoff, Campbell took off from the 20 and went 80 yards for the score. Espinoza once again connected on the point after and Loudon was up 20-13.

    With the lead, the Redskin special teams hit the field for the kickoff, Sweetwater muffed the kick and Loudon recovered at the Wildcat 33.

    Miley got the call on first down and went 23 yards for first and goal. Loudon couldn't punch it in for the touchdown, but Espinoza hit a 21-yard field goal to put more points on the board for the Redskins. They were up 23-13 heading into the fourth quarter.

    Neither team was able to get going to start the fourth, but Loudon was the first to score at the 6:17 mark with Matthew Wallace returning an interception 55 yards for the TD. Espinoza added the point after and the Redskins had the lead 30-13.

    Sweetwater had one more opportunity to try to add points to the board, but that all ended when Gasper got an interception to close out any Wildcat threat.

    The Redskins ran out the clock and got their first region win 30-13. The Redskins were led by Miley with 105 yards on 13 rushes. McNew went three of six for 62 yards with one INT.

    The Redskins (4-1, 1-1) have a bye week Friday before traveling to Rockwood on Oct. 5.

     

    Early lead allows Loudon to cruise late in win over ‘Kees
    By: De
    wey Morgan
    Source: Loudon County News-Herald
    09-17-2007

     

    Among the hazy mist of cannon fire, Loudon completed the sweep of county opponents with a 49-14 win over Greenback at Dukes Field. The celebratory cannon Redskin faithful shoot off after a home touchdown saw plenty of work as the hosts took a 35-0 lead after the opening quarter and cruised from there as they handed the Cherokees their first loss of the year. Greenback opened the game with an onside kick attempt, but the Redskins fell on the ball at their own 39. Two plays later, tailback D'Andre Miley rushed 55 yards to paydirt to put the hosts up. Carlos Espinoza nailed the point after and 27 seconds into the game Loudon led 7-0. The ‘Kees failed to gain a yard on the ensuing possession and punted the ball back to the Redskins. Tyler Campbell broke through Greenback tacklers to the endzone on the return, but it was called back due to a block in the back. The Redskin offense was undaunted as four plays later they found the end zone again from the Greenback 16. This time, quarterback Blake McNew threw a swing pass to Grant Gasper on the right hashmark and the senior raced 16 yards for the score. Espinoza again added the PAT and the hosts led 14-0. Things continued going Loudon's way on the next possession as Greenback's Cody Knight fumbled the kickoff and the Redskins recovered on the Cherokee 15. It took just one play for Tyler Campbell to take his first carry of the night to the house and, after Espinoza's kick, give Loudon a 21-0 advantage.

    The struggles continued for Greenback on the next possession as Shawn Petty picked up three yards on the first play, but quarterback Bunkie Vanskiver threw his first of three interceptions on the next play. From his own 35, Vanskiver fired a pass to the right hashmark that was bobbled between two Cherokee receivers. The ball bounced behind them and Campbell came away with the interception. He raced in between defenders, reached the left sideline and raced 42 yards to paydirt. Espinoza added another PAT and the host lead was 28.

    The first extended possession of the evening for Greenback came with 6:24 remaining in the quarter. The visitors moved 58 yards in 12 plays, primarily behind passes from Vanskiver to Chase Vogt. The QB hooked up with his receiver four times on the drive for 55 yards. Once the Cherokees got to the host 11, though, another turnover killed the drive. Vanskiver dropped to pass, but Jake Kleinschmidt intercepted his pass and returned the ball back to the Loudon 11. McNew's first pass on the ensuing drive was incomplete, but Loudon went back to the successful ground game and again found the end zone. With 11 second remaining in the quarter, Campbell took the handoff on a sweep right and took off down the sideline for an 89-yard TD run. Espinoza capped the opening period scoring with an extra point that put the Redskins up 35-0. The hosts scored again on the next drive behind the feet of Tyler Barr. The tailback carried the ball on two of the drive's three plays, gaining 44 yards on his first carry and punching the ball in from a yard out on his second. Espinoza's point after gave Loudon a 42-point lead. Greenback finally found the end zone on the ensuing possession. Vanskiver began the drive with a six-yard swing pass to Vogt, moving the ball to the visitors' 36. From there, Vanskiver hit Ernie Stinnett in the flat on the left side and Stinnett raced down the sideline for the score. Greenback Head Coach Brent Kilpatrick chose to go for two, and Vanskiver found Vogt on a slant pattern on the goal line to cut the Loudon advantage to 42-8.

    The final score of the half came in the last seconds as the Redskin offense drove the ball to the Greenback six with three seconds remaining. McNew found Gregory Vaught slanting across the middle of the end zone and Espinoza's point after gave the hosts a 41-point advantage at the half. The mercy rule was implemented through the second half, limiting the possessions and scoring opportunities for each team. Greenback managed the only score of the second half after recovering a Zach Franklin fumble. Beginning from the Loudon 47, the Cherokees orchestrated a five-play, 53-yard scoring drive capped by a Vanskiver pass to Cody Lane on a slant pattern from the 26-yard line. The conversion attempt failed as Vanskiver's pass sailed past the covered receiver, sealing the final score.

    After the game, Kilpatrick said “apparently we weren't prepared to play tonight,” and took responsibility for his team “coming out, playing flat and making mistakes.” Kilpatrick said it was “apparent our intensity level wasn't what it needed to be” in the first half, but told his team he was proud of improved effort in the second half. The coach said of his quarterback, “Bunkie stayed in and made some good throws.” Also of the team's leading receiver, Vogt, “Chase found some open spots in the zone.” Kilpatrick was unsure exactly how a loss of this type would affect his team, but said, “We're going to coach them hard. They better respond.” Vanskiver finished the game completing 10 of 23 passes for 157 yards. He tossed two touchdowns and three interceptions. Vogt caught six balls for 66 yards and Stinnett grabbed two for 64 yards and a touchdown. McNew was successful on three of his four passes for 30 yards and two touchdowns. Campbell rushed twice for 104 yards and two touchdowns. The Redskins finished the game with 324 yards on the ground. Loudon (3-1, 0-1) travels to Sweetwater Friday for a region matchup while Greenback (2-1, 1-0) returns home to face Harriman. Both games are scheduled for 7:30 p.m.

     

    CAK hands Loudon first loss, 38-21
    By: Brittany Davis
    Source: Loudon County News-Herald
    09-12-2007

    The Loudon Redskins traveled to Knoxville to take on the Warriors of CAK Friday night. It was a classic battle with each team trying to answer the other. In the end Loudon came up short 38-21. Tyler Campbell was a bright spot for the Redskins with three touchdowns and 45 yards rushing. D'Andre Miley also added 42 yards on the ground. The first quarter started with each team testing the water, as neither team was able to score. CAK struck first as they took the ball from the LHS 20 yard line. On second down and 10 after collecting a first down on a Redskin penalty, Keenan Kolinsky went 58 yards to put the Warriors on the Loudon 12 yard line.

    From there Kolinsky picked up five more yards to put CAK on the seven. Chris Cates then found Joseph Bennett for the TD. Matthew Warren tacked on the point after to give the Warriors the early lead, 7-0. The Redskins couldn't get their offense going at the end of the quarter and had to punt. The punt was tipped and CAK got excellent field position at the Loudon 26 yard line. The Warriors took only 18 seconds to find pay dirt as Kolinsky added another touchdown. Warren tacked on the PAT and Loudon found itself down 14-0.

    The visitors finally got going on defense after their first offensive series of the second quarter came up short. On first and 10, Bo Harrison sacked CAK's Cates for a seven-yard loss. Ben Curtis was then able to knock away a Warrior pass, forcing the hosts into a third and long situation. On third and 17 Ben Everett laid a big hit on Kolinsky to force CAK to punt. Campbell returned the punt to CAK's 25-yard line. From there the Redskins were forced into a fourth and 14, but Blake McNew found Ben Curtis on a slant to pick up the first down on the 11. Campbell then carried for four yards, then for the seven-yard touchdown. Carlos Espinoza added the point after and the Redskins closed the gap to 14-7.

    The Warriors had an answer though. Behind Cates, CAK was able to march downfield. Cates found Bill High for the 15 yard TD and Warren tacked on the PAT to give the Warriors a 21-7 advantage at the half. The Redskins came out of the locker room with a mission. Loudon got the ball on its own 24-yard line. McNew found Keenan Hawkins who took the ball all the way to CAK's 39 and, on the following play, Miley picked up three yards for LHS. Then, Tyler Barr took the ball down to the three-yard line. Campbell got the nod and took the ball into the end zone, Espinoza added the point after and the Redskins were coming back, 21-14. The Warriors had an answer for the Redskins, though, as Cates found Bennett for a 34-yard gain. Cates then found Jordan Cross for the 31-yard TD. Warren's PAT was good as CAK stretched its lead to 28-14.

    Loudon's Miley answered right back as he took the kickoff down to the Warrior's nine-yard line. McNew then pitched the ball to Campbell for a nine-yard touchdown. Espinoza added the extra point and the Redskins were once again within seven at 28-21. The Warriors added another score to end the third quarter, as Cates found Jay Scott for a 23-yard TD pass. Warren remained perfect on PAT's as CAK went up 35-21. In the fourth quarter both teams exchanged possessions without adding any points to the board, until CAK was able to put three points up on a Warren 25-yard field goal with three minutes to go. The Redskins had a chance to make a run at CAK as Richard Butkus recovered a Warrior fumble. The Loudon offense wasn't able to collect on the turnover, instead they fumbled to give it back to CAK. The Warriors kept the ball to run out the clock and seal a 38-21 victory. The Redskins (2-1) return home Friday when they host county rival Greenback. Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.

     

    Redskins win third straight over Panthers with scoring flurry
    By: Dewey Morgan

    Source: Loudon County News-Herald
    09-05-2007

     

    A flurry of third quarter points sealed the third consecutive win for Loudon in the “Battle of the Bridge” at Chig Ratledge Stadium Friday night. With Loudon leading 14-0 coming out of halftime, Lenoir City's Coty Edwards took the opening handoff and raced 80 yards to cut the Redskin lead in half. Loudon answered right back, though, scoring 19 unanswered points the remainder of the quarter to clinch a 40-7 win over the Panthers. Redskin junior tailback Tyler Campbell, in his first game of the season after recovering from an ankle injury, provided 14 of those points on runs of 38 yards and 52 yards. Campbell finished the day with 176 yards on 13 carries and three touchdowns. “He's our spark,” Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig said of the junior. “Anytime that kind of guy gets back, it really helps the team.”

    The ground game was good all night for Loudon, as the Redskins piled up 353 yards on the ground. D'Andre Miley contributed 93 of those, on 18 carries. The junior also added a touchdown on the opening kickoff of the game. He received the ball on his own 18, took it up the middle and then burst to the right sideline for an 82-yard score. “Wow,” said Harig of Miley's return, “That's just D'Andre right there. It was a great return and a great way to start the game.” Lenoir City Head Coach Nick White said the return was a blow to his team's confidence. “We knew we would have to survive through the emotion. I'd hoped we could get through the first five to 10 minutes without a big play.”

    The Panther defense didn't allow any more points to Loudon until the end of the quarter. Lenoir City's offense had trouble moving the ball on the Redskin defense too. The Panthers were held to a three and out after the return. After Lenoir City's punt, the Redskins held the ball at the visitors' 45. An incomplete pass by quarterback Blake McNew was followed by 36 yards worth of runs by Miley and Campbell to put the ball at the Panther nine.

    The visiting defense stepped up and held Loudon to a field goal attempt, which kicker Carlos Espinoza missed off the top of the right goal post. Espinoza missed two field goals throughout the evening, but Harig supported his junior kicker. “He's going to be an important asset to our team in the future, so we want him to get a lot of work.” After the missed field goal, the Panther offense took over at their own 20. After two runs for six yards, quarterback Ben Satterfield found Jacob Bright on a screen pass for 10 yards. With less than seven minutes remaining in the first quarter, the visitors picked up their initial first down of the evening.

    The Redskin defense held firm from there, forcing a Lenoir City punt on fourth and 14 from its own 30. A very short punt gave the hosts possession on the Panther 42, setting up the first scoring drive of the night. The Redskins ran eight plays, covering 42 yards, including gains of 12 and 19 by Miley and Campbell respectively. Campbell capped off the drive with a six-yard run over the left tackle to put the hosts up 14-0 just before the first quarter ended. After a Lenoir City punt opened the second quarter, the Redskins began their third offensive drive of the game from their own 48. The drive marked the first time the ball was in Redskin territory in the game. Neither team found the end zone in the second half as two of Lenoir City's possessions resulted in a three and out and Espinoza missed his second field goal of the evening for the hosts.

    The biggest threat of the half by the visitors came near the end of the second quarter. On third and 13 from the Lenoir City 39, Harig attempted a reverse. McNew handed the ball off to Ben Everett, who then gave it to Keenan Hawkins. Hawkins, though, fumbled the exchange and the Panthers recovered the ball on their own 47 with 54 seconds left before halftime.

    The first play of the half was an incomplete pass as Satterfield overthrew the intended receiver. The senior found a groove from there, though, connecting with Bright for seven yards and then hitting Derrick Pratt across the middle for 16 yards to the Redskin 30. Satterfield quickly spiked the ball, leaving 37 seconds on the clock. On the ensuing play, Satterfield was sacked, making the drive look bleak. Following a timeout, though, the senior found Michael Goodman on a slant pattern across the middle and the receiver took the ball 30 yards downfield to the host 10.

    On first and goal, Satterfield attempted to scramble into the endzone, but was stuffed at the five. A quick spike stopped the clock with three seconds remaining, but the ensuing play resulted in a sack and the clock ran out on the Panthers' drive.

    White said of the late drive, “The confidence kind of got going and we started making some plays.”

    That confidence seemed to carry over after the break as, after Espinoza kicked the ball into the end zone, Edwards streaked 80 yards for the only Panther score of the game.

    The Redskins pulled away from there, though, as Campbell found the end zone twice in the quarter and McNew ran in once from 22 yards away to give the hosts a 33-7 advantage heading to the final period. Loudon scored once more in the fourth with eight minutes to go.

    After a four play, 62-yard drive, the hosts held the ball at the Panther nine. McNew took the snap on third and six, rolled left and found fellow senior Ben Everett in the end zone for a touchdown to seal the final score.

    After the game, White said his team seemed to relax after the touchdown and added, “We have to learn that people aren't going to back down just because we score.”

    Coty Edwards led the visitors in rushing with 87 yards and a touchdown. T.J. Cratty tacked on 23 more yards.

    Both teams hit the road this week, with the Redskins (2-0) heading to CAK and Lenoir City (0-2) visiting Powell. Both games are set to begin at 7:30 p.m.

    Redskins charge to opening win over McMinn Central
    By: Dewey Morgan
    Source: Loudon County News-Herald
    08-27-2007

    McNew
    Hawkins
    Barr
    Miley---------------Curtis

    Without the services of starting tailback Tyler Campbell due to an ankle injury, the Redskin running game showed no signs of slowing. Junior D'Andre Miley, helped by touchdown runs of 36 and 85, finished the game with 182 yards on 13 carries and two touchdowns. Fellow junior Tyler Barr chipped in 70 yards on 13 carries with one rushing TD and one passing touchdown.

    Loudon Head Coach Jeff Harig said he wasn't surprised to see the running game do so well even in the absence of Campbell. He said during a scrimmage with Polk County recently, Barr rushed 10 times for 87 yards and Miley rushed 10 times for 106 yards. “We really saw D'Andre grow up last week,” Harig said of his junior. He added about Friday night's performance, “With Tyler out, (Miley) really stepped up for us.”

    Campbell has been nursing a sprained ankle since before the jamboree and Harig said he was available Friday night in case of an emergency, but wasn't sure he'd be able to go Friday against Lenoir City. “We don't know, it's just kind of day-to-day,” Harig explained. Loudon took the opening kick and began the first drive of the season at its own 32. The Redskins ran four plays, all runs, to get to the Charger 32, but Miley was stuffed at the line on fourth and two.

    The Chargers took the ball at their own 32 and were forced into a quick three and out. The hosts lined up to punt on fourth, but the snap sailed over punter Ryan Russell's head and he kicked it through the back of the end zone for a safety before the Redskins could fall on the ball. After the free kick, the Redskins took over on their own 42, but the Chargers' Shane Moses fell on a Barr fumble on the first play. Two plays later, with the ball on the Redskin 28, McMinn Central quarterback Jordan Jackson misfired on a pass and Loudon's Gregory Vaught came away with a diving interception.

    Barr took over from there, making up for his earlier fumble by touching the ball on every down of a 10-play, 73-yard scoring drive. Barr carried the rock nine times for 71 yards and finished off the drive with a touchdown pass on a trick play to Keenan Hawkins on third down and goal from the two.

    After three failed drives, the Chargers took over the ball on their own 15 with 3:15 remaining in the half. Jackson rushed the ball two yards up the middle on the first play of the drive to set up second and eight. Quarterback Mick Gross fired down the left sideline on the second play and the Redskins' Ben Curtis made a diving interception over his shoulder to set up the next Redskin score.

    After an incomplete pass and a loss of one on a failed screen pass followed by a delay of game penalty, the visitors faced third and 16 from their own 45. Quarterback Blake McNew rolled left and found Vaught streaking down the left sideline for an easy 55-yard touchdown pass. The failed extra point kept the score 14-0 heading to halftime.

    As the teams headed off the field for halftime, the storms began. Rain only sprinkled down, but the lightning streaked across the sky. A Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association (TSSAA) mandated 30-minute delay ensued to let the lightning pass, and then the game continued. Harig said the delay likely cooled his team down and played a part in their slow start to the second half. “(The Chargers) came out with a renewed spirit and they caught us on a big play and scored.” The score the coach referred to was on the opening drive of the second half. McMinn Central took the ball on their own 42 and moved to the Loudon 24, thanks primarily to a 35-yard reverse by Ryan Slack.

    On second and 12 from the 24, Gross found Jackson in the left corner of the end zone and Jackson pulled in the pass with two Redskin defenders flocking him. The visitors quickly recaptured the momentum when, starting from his own 15, McNew handed the ball off to Miley up the middle and the junior broke to the outside and raced 85 yards to paydirt. “That took a little bit of wind out of their sails,” Harig said after the game. The conversion snap then went to Barr who dodged Charger defenders the three yards needed to make the two-point conversion successful and put the visitors up 22-7.

    Two bad snaps by the Chargers on the ensuing possession gave the Redskins possession on the host eight. On the second play of the drive, Barr took the ball on a stretch play and dove into the end zone for the score. The final visiting score came with under five minutes remaining in the third. After a turnover on downs by the hosts, the Redskins began their drive from the opposing 44.

    Three plays that gained eight yards set up a fourth and two from the 36. The Redskins chose to go for it and Miley took the handoff and raced the remainder of the field for his second TD of the game. After the game, Harig said this win was “a good first win. They're a dangerous team with some athletes.” He added an opening win helped build confidence for the team. “All the things we've been preaching about doing, this just confirms those things.” The Redskins (1-0) open their home slate Friday when county rival Lenoir City visits for the annual “Battle of the Bridge.” Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.