Sincerely, the Saxons.
Hastings is back on top of the Interstate-8 Athletic Conference, sharing the top spot in the conference with Harper Creek and Jackson Lumen Christi thanks to a lopsided Saxon victory over Pennfield last Friday night and a Beaver victory over the Lumen Christi Titans. All three teams are now 4-1 in conference action, with the Saxons falling to the Titans and the Beavers falling to the Saxons in previous weeks.
The Saxons will be looking to stay on top of the conference when they play host to Jackson Northwest for homecoming inside Baum Stadium at Johnson Field this Friday night.
Hastings is 5-0 against the Mounties since joining the Interstate-8 Athletic Conference. The Mounties are 0-5 in I-8 play this fall having been bested by Marshall 49-14 last week.
The Saxons aren't the only area team still chasing a conference championship. The Lakewood Vikings and Olivet Eagles are set for their annual clash atop the Greater Lansing Activities Conference.
The Vikings and Eagles are both 4-2 overall and 3-0 in the GLAC this fall. Lakewood will host Olivet at Unity Field Friday.
Thornapple Kellogg is out of the frying pan and into the fire, having fallen to Cedar Springs on homecoming night in Middleville only to get the defensing Division 5 state champions from Grand Rapids Catholic Central coming to town this Friday night.
The Cougars come to Middleville with a perfect record so far this fall. They have won a state championship in four of the past five seasons, with Division 4 state championships in 2016, 2017 and 2019 to go along with the 2020 title.
Maple Valley has Friday night off and will make the long trek for its first Tri-River 8-Man Football Conference contest with Britton-Deerfield Saturday. The Lions snapped a two-game losing skid with a non-conference win at New Buffalo last week. That gives the Lions a bit of momentum to take into the match-up with the undefeated, conference-leading Patriots who have outscored their opponents 292 to 36 over the past five weeks.
“They're undefeated and well coached and with a good quarterback. It's a really good football team and they have been scoring a lot of points,” Lion head coach Marty Martin said. “We're going to take our turn and see what we can do.”
Britton-Deerfield took a forfeit win in week one. Delton Kellogg had to miss its week six ballgame, but the Panthers are looking to get back on the field this Friday night when they host Saugatuck for homecoming at DKHS. The Trailblazers from Saugatuck come to Delton Kellogg having won two in a row.
Local Standings (W-L, playoff points)
Hastings 5-1 (52.833)
Lakewood 4-2 (26.667)
Delton Kellogg 3-2 (29.667)
Maple Valley (8-player) 2-4
Thornapple Kellogg 1-5 (25.833)
Conference Standings (overall, conference)
Interstate 8 Athletic Conference
Lumen Christi 5-0, 4-0
Hastings 4-1, 3-1
Harper Creek 3-2, 3-1
Coldwater 3-2, 3-1
Parma Western 3-2, 2-2
Pennfield 2-3, 1-3
Marshall 1-4, 0-4
Northwest 1-4, 0-4
OK Gold Conference
G.R. Catholic Central 6-0, 4-0
Cedar Springs 5-1, 4-0
Kenowa Hills 2-4, 1-3
South Christian 4-2, 3-1
Forest Hills Eastern 3-3, 2-2
Ottawa Hills 2-4, 1-3
Thornapple Kellogg 1-5, 1-3
Wayland 0-6, 0-4
Southwestern Athletic Conference Valley
Saugatuck 4-2, 1-0
Delton Kellogg 3-2, 1-0
Lawton 6-0, 0-0
Schoolcraft 1-4, 1-1
Galesburg-Augusta 0-6, 0-2
Greater Lansing Activities Conference
Olivet 4-2, 3-0
Lakewood 4-2, 3-0
Leslie 3-3, 2-2
Stockbridge 2-4, 0-3
Perry 1-5, 0-3
Tri-River 8-Man Football Conference
Britton-Deerfield 6-0, 3-0
NorthPointe Christian 4-2, 3-1
Maple Valley 2-4, 1-2
Concord 2-4, 1-3
Vandercook Lake 2-4, 1-3
Here is a round-up of last week's local gridiron action.
Hastings 55, Pennfield 6
Valerie Slaughter
Contributing Writer
The Hastings football team continued its drive for an Interstate-8 Athletic Conference title with a 52–6 win over Pennfield at Battle Creek Pennfield High School Friday night. The Saxons remain tied for the conference title with Lumen Christi and Harper Creek, after Lumen lost to Harper Creek Friday night.
Hastings senior defensive tackle, Jackson Dubois, said “the game was a good chance for everyone on the team to get a chance to experience what they practice every week and prepare for. All of the linemen were on assignment and made things easier for the fresh backs to hit their holes. I think this season will be one to remember. I feel like we are finally working as a team. There’s no tension between the upperclassmen and underclassmen. We all just put our heads down and get the work done.”
Hastings had defensive and offensive plays from a multitude of Saxons in the game. Twenty-three different players grabbed tackles for the night.
On offense, the Saxons made a couple quick scores after shutting Pennfield down on defense. Robby Slaughter ran in the first two touchdowns of the night within the first five minutes of the game on 48-yard and 60-yard runs. Daniel Harp made the first two-point conversion and Mason Denton completed a pass to Tommy Hollars for the next two-point conversion.
The Hastings defense again shut down Pennfield before TJ Russell ran in a 51-yard touchdown with 3:26 left in the first quarter. Saxon defensive player, Layton Eastman, picked off a pass on Pennfield’s next drive, returning the ball to the Saxon offense and giving Lanny Teunessen the chance to score a 28-yard run with only 2:58 left in the first quarter. At the end of the first, the Saxons led 31–0.
Collin Fouty put another touchdown on the board in the second quarter on a 35-yard run, before Pennfield scored their first and only touchdown of the game shortly before half-time and a 3-yard run by Luke Davis, for a 38-6 Saxon lead at the half.
Teunessen put another two touchdowns on the board in the third quarter on a 14-yard and 43-yard drive, and Victor Ramirez kicked the extra points. Slaughter led the team in rushing yards with 137 yards, Teunessen added 126 yards and Russell also carried the ball for 100 yards on the night.
The Saxon defense contained Pennfield to only 113 yards rushing and 78 passing yards for the night. Hastings’ defense was led by Ramirez with 4.5 tackles, Eastman added two interceptions for the night and Daniel Weatherly added a quarterback sack.
Cedar Springs 44, Thornapple Kellogg 10
Fireworks still exploded beyond the southwest corner of Bob White Stadium. The Trojans still raised their helmets to their classmates in the student section. The Thornapple Kellogg High School marching band still played a raucous rendition of the Trojan fight song.
Everything was right but the scoreboard at the end of the Trojan varsity football team’s 2021 homecoming contest with visiting Cedar Springs Friday. The Red Hawks improved to 5-1 overall this season and 4-0 in the OK Gold Conference with a 44-10 win in Middleville over the now 1-5 Trojans.
The Red Hawks flew up and down the field with their Wing-T offense led by senior quarterback Aiden Brunin. When asked if he thought he had a lineman on either side of the ball bigger than Brunin, TK head coach Jeff Dock said, “nope,” (maybe tight end Jaxan Sias.) But behind his massive offensive line, Brunin didn’t look outsized.
Alex Harrington, a recently recruited varsity soccer player, notched TK’s lone points of the first half on a 25-yard field goal, which had his team within 8-3 at the time. Harrington then finished the scoring by booting an extra-point kick following a 10-yard touchdown run by teammate Drake Snyder in the final minute.
Brunin rushed for times for 52 yards. Back Ryan Mitchell was the workhorse for the Red Hawks, carrying the ball ten times for 145 yards and three touchdowns – all in the first half.
Mitchell scored on a 14-yard run three and a half minutes into the ballgame, and then Brunin and Mitchell connected on the two-point conversion for an 8-0 Cedar Springs lead. Mitchell scored on a two-yard run with 5:15 to play in the first half, a 60-yard run with 4:01 to go in the first half and a 24-yard and then teammate Alex Ream scored on a 24-yard run with 59 seconds left in the first half.
One more two-point conversion had the Red Hawks up 28-3 at the half. Cedar Springs added a seven-yard TD run by Carter Falan and a 42-yard TD run by Logan Troupe in the second half, with Falan following each of those touchdowns up with a successful two-point run.
The Cedar Springs offense racked up 411 total yards on the night, all on the ground.
Alex Ream had a team-high 13 tackles for the Red Hawks on defense. The Red Hawk defense intercepted TK quarterback Carsen Burbridge once.
Burbridge was 10-of-18 passing for 116 yards. TK backs Jayden Garcia, Drake Snyder and Tyler Gavette each right around 30 yards rushing, and sophomore quarterback Grant Middleton led the TK scoring drive while recording 27 yards rushing on six carries and completing his only pass attempt for nine yards.
TK receiver Zack Gibson had two catches for 55 yards and tight end Sias had two catches, including a leaping one-handed grab up the left sideline, for 31 total yards.
Gibson recovered a Red Hawk fumble to help keep his team within striking distance early on in the ballgame. Jonah Summerhays led the TK defense with six tackles.
Lakewood 41, Stockbridge 14
Lakewood's varsity football team improved to 3-0 in the conference with a 41-14 win at Stockbridge Friday night, Oct. 1, while Olivet was being bested 21-14 by Pewamo-Westphalia in a non-conference ballgame – leaving the Vikings and the Eagles tied atop the conference heading into their match-up this Friday night.
“We played really well tonight,” Lakewood head coach Matt Markwart said. “Really well. I am really proud of them. We had our two and a half minutes of adversity and let them score a couple times and then turned it on.”
Lakewood took a 19-0 lead in the first half, but the Panthers rallied to get within 19-14 with 2:10 left in the third quarter. The Panthers were helped to their first touchdown by a Viking fumble, then recovered an on-side kick and scored again two plays later to get within a single score. Jeremy Pilsch scored both Stockbridge touchdowns.
Lakewood answered with a five-play, 93-yard drive to get control of the ballgame back, ahead 27-14, and then closed out the victory with a second and then a third fourth-quarter TD.
“We have seven guys that rotate in there [on the offensive line],” Markwart said, “seven offensive linemen, tackles, guards, and centers and two tight ends. It was a team effort. They all just did their jobs tonight and worked really well. It didn't matter who we put in there. They drove hard and got off the ball all game.
“Even the receivers blocked well.”
That wall up front allowed running back Denny Sauers to rush for 167 yards and four touchdowns on 17 carries. Quarterback Nathan Willette had 14 rushes for 159 yards and a score and Montreal Reid added six carries for 32 yards and a touchdown. Nathaniel Graham had the Vikings' lone reception, for 17 yards, from Willette.
Coach Markwart was very pleased his team was able to keep Stockbridge star Pilsch in check.
“For the most part we shut him down tonight,” Markwart said. “We played real well on the defensive side of the ball.”
“They move him around in different formations quarterback, running back, receiver, tight end,” Markwart added. “We talked about how we had to recognize and point out where he was at. There wasn't a single time when everybody on the field didn't know where he was at. We double covered him. We harassed him, jammed him off the ball and made him work for what he had to get. We didn't do anything cheap or dirty, but kept harassing him until we got under his skin.”
The Lakewood defense ended three Stockbridge drives with interceptions, one each for Charlie Everitt, Reid and Graham.
Maple Valley 36, New Buffalo 14
The Maple Valley defense stood firm inside its ten yard line late in the first half and then the Lion offense found its groove in the second half to score a 36-14 win in a non-conference ballgame at New Buffalo Friday night.
Maple Valley improved to 2-5 overall this season with the victory over the now 3-3 Bison.
“I have to hand it to our kids. All week long we really focused on fundamentals on defense, getting over blocks, getting off blocks, keeping our leverage, and it really showed tonight. The two touchdowns they scored they really had to work their way down the field,” Lion head coach Marty Martin said.
Jesse Deppe had an astounding 24 tackles for the Lions. Reese Proctor-Burhans had 15 tackles and Nicholas Martin and Callan Hoefler had 11 tackles apiece for the Lions. Tyler Rose added two interceptions. Coach Martin was also pleased that his team recovered a pair of onside kicks – one each by Rose and Caydon Scott.
Offensively, Scott had a team high 96 yards rushing on six carries. Andrew Shepherd rushed 22 times for 72 yards. Rose had five carries for 44 yards. Lion quarterback Ayden Wilkes was 2-of-6 passing for 44 yards and one interception.
The only points of the first half were scored on a five-yard TD run by Shepherd seven minutes into the ballgame.
Following the onside kick to start the second half, Scott scored on a 38-yard run. An eight-yard TD run by Rose added to the Lion lead with 6:31 to play in the third quarter. The Lions followed both of those touchdowns with successful two-point conversion attempts to lead 22-0.
The teams traded touchdowns the rest of the way. New Buffalo got a one-yard TD run from Ben Coffeen and the Lions got a 24-yard TD run by Rose before the third quarter was through.
Eli Thomas scored on a one-yard run for the Bison early in the fourth quarter and the Lions finished the TD scoring with Shepherd finding the end zone from a yard out with 3:23 to play. The Linos followed each of their final touchdowns with successful two-point conversions.
“We were trying to get outside with our sweep, and we were able to get up and under their ends,” coach Martin said of his team's success in the running game Friday. “They were bringing their ends up hard.”
“We got good kick out blocks on linebackers and backs ran hard,” coach Martin said.
The Lions finished with 231 yards rushing as a team, compared to the Bison's 113.
Thomas led the Bison attack with 20 rushes for 51 yards.
The Lions return to Tri-River 8-Man Football Conference play Saturday, Oct. 9, at league-leading Britton-Deerfield.