Well worth the wait for St. Charles East
By Craig Brueske | Daily Herald Correspondent
Published: 10/24/2009 7:54 PM
After waiting an extra day for the game to be played, it only seemed fitting that
the 2009 version of the "Cross-town Classic" would extend beyond regulation.
Quarterback Nolan Possley's extra-effort, 1-yard touchdown plunge on 4th-and-goal
and Dan Keller's extra-point kick in the second overtime proved pivotal during
St. Charles East's 14-13 victory over St. Charles North (6-3, 4-3) Saturday afternoon
at Norris Stadium.
The North Stars, who went on defense first in the second overtime, scored a touchdown
of their own when Jake Bergren connected with Josh Mikes on 3rd-and-goal from
the Saints' 7-yard line.
After a brief sideline discussion, St. Charles North elected to try and send the
game into a third overtime but Alex Pohl's PAT kick sailed just wide of the right
upright, kicking off a celebration of sorts for the Saints.
Not only did they knock off St. Charles North for the fifth time in as many years
(St. Charles East won twice in 2005) but the Saints (7-2, 7-0) also captured their
first outright Upstate Eight Conference championship since 1998.
"This is the best feeling I've had in a while," said Possley, who was
harassed throughout the day by the North Stars' defense before his go-ahead TD
run. "We've been listening to the coaches since day one in June about winning
the conference championship.
"Obviously, this is the biggest game of the year for us. They (North Stars)
put up a heck of a fight but this is how we've always wanted it - to get a win
like this."
The North Stars had a chance to take the lead during the first overtime but Cory
Harmon misfired on a 24-yard field goal try. St. Charles East also squandered
its opportunity in the first OT, as Keller's 35-yard field goal attempt fell short.
After a 6-yard, third-down gain by Zach Zajicek (17 carries, 64 yards) moved the
ball inside the 1 during the second OT session, Saints coach Mike Fields was left
with a decision - to go for the field goal or the touchdown.
"It wasn't even a doubt," said Fields. "Nolan (Possley) was screaming,
'wedge, wedge, wedge,' and I was going to give my senior that opportunity. And
it was his second effort that really got him in there.
"That play really exemplifies our whole season - just don't quit. These kids
are going to remember that for the rest of their lives."
St. Charles North grabbed a 7-0 halftime lead on Jake Bergren's 49-yard TD pass
to Jeff Stolzenburg midway through the second quarter.
But momentum began to shift during St. Charles North's opening possession of the
second half, which ended with a fumbled pitch that was recovered by Saints defensive
lineman Jonathan Voytilla.
"That first series in the second half was just absolutely horrible,"
said North Stars coach Mark Gould. "We had two penalties, a fumble - we just
went backward and it changed the momentum."
The Saints made them pay for their mistake moments later when Zajicek scored from
a yard out and Keller's PAT kick tied the game at 7-7. Possley's 23-yard completion
to Tyler Nutting on 3rd-and-14 helped keep the drive alive.
St. Charles North committed 3 second-half turnovers (recovered 5 other fumbles)
and also had Jordan Huxtable's 23-yard touchdown run called back because of a
penalty.
"We had some missed opportunities," admitted Gould. "I thought
our defense played a great game so it's really tough for them to have to lose
it this way."
"We said at halftime that we needed to get some turnovers," said Saints
defensive back Bryce Barry. "We knew we could cause some fumbles if we kept
getting after them."
It was anything but a normal week for the Saints, who weren't allowed to conduct
formal practices Wednesday and Thursday due to the school's closing (972 student
illnesses reported Tuesday).
"It definitely was a different feeling playing on Saturday afternoon,"
said Possley. "We came together as a team this week. We said, 'just because
we didn't have school doesn't mean that we can't put in the work ourselves.'
"We worked out as a team and tried to run normal practices (without coaches)
because we wanted to keep doing what we've been doing."
Winning makes everyone feel better.
"With all the tradition this school has had and now to be a part of that
tradition, it feels great," said Barry. "But this is just Step 1. We've
still got a bunch more steps to go in the playoffs."