T C Williams High School | Archive | October, 2008

Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager, Northern Region

**Click the video tab above the video player for highlights**

Senior quarterback Cason Kynes threw for four touchdowns Friday night and ran for another in Annandale’s 42-19 win over visiting Lee, earning him the Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week award.

In addition to his 254-yards passing and 139-yards rushing, Cason was also named Homecoming King at half time.

“We worked hard last week,” said Kynes.

“It was homecoming week so we had a lot of exciting things going on but our coach made sure that we worked hard in practice and it definately paid off.”

Annandale travels to Lake Braddock this week and needs a win to keep its playoff hopes alive.

“Every team that we have left is a good match-up for us,” Kynes added. “If we want to win we have to work hard Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.”


Click Here for a complete list of winners

Cox Communications is proud to serve the residents of
Fairfax County, and is honored to present the Cox ON DEMAND High School
Performer of the Week trophy award to the standout player from a Fairfax County
team weekly.

Please send nominations to awatts@digitalsports.com

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Football: Northern Region Power Point Ratings — Updated!

The Virginia High School League rates its teams based on their win-loss
record and bonus points that are awarded based on the teams’ strength
of schedule.

Seven games into the season, this is how the
Northern Region football teams would stand if the post-season
started today. Eight teams in each division advance to the playoffs, with the No. 1 seed hosting the No. 8 seed, the No. 2 seed hosting the No.7 seed, the No. 3 seed hosting the No. 6 seed and the No. 4 team hosting the No. 5 team.

In the event of a tie, here’s how the VHSL handbook says it would be broken:

1. The winner of any games between the two tied teams if only two teams are involved. If more than two teams tied, and one of the tied teams beat all other tied teams, that team shall advance.
2. The team with the better record against all common opponents.
3. The team with the highest winning percentage against rating-scale-recognized opponents.
4. The team with the higher average rating of all of each team’s opponents.
5. The regional chairman or his/her alternate if his/her school is
involved, shall draw by lot to determine the playoff representative.

Division 5                                                      

No. 1. Edison (30.3)
No. 2. Stone Bridge (28.6)
No. 3. Mount Vernon (24.9)
No. 4. Madison (23.7) 
No. 5. Yorktown (23.3)
No. 6. Washington-Lee (21.0)
No. 7. Marshall (19.9)
No. 8. Thomas Jefferson (19.0)

Knocking on the door:
No. 9 Wakefield (18.6)
TNo. 10. Robert E. Lee (18.4)
TNo. 10. South Lakes (18.4)

Division 6                                                      

TNo. 1. Oakton (30.3)
TNo. 1. Westfield (30.3)
No. 3. Chantilly (28.0)
No. 4. West Springfield (27.4)
TNo. 5. W.T. Woodson (25.3)
TNo. 5. West Potomac (25.3)
No. 7. Herndon (24.6)
TNo.8 South County (23.6)
TNo.8 Lake Braddock (23.6)
 
Knocking on the door:
No. 10. Langley (23.3)
No. 11. Fairfax (22.9)

NOTE: The number in parentheses is the current power-point rating issued by the Virginia High School League. DigitalSports will update these potential parings each week once the new ratings are released by the VHSL.

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Football: A Weekend Preview — Week 7

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, Washington D.C.

**Check back with DigitalSports throughout the week for video recaps of nearly every game in the Northern Region!!

Concorde District                                                        
No. 2 Oakton (6-0, 3-0) at Centreville (1-5, 0-3) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
The team in sole possession of first place in the Concorde District meets the team in sole possession of last, with the latter being the indisputably more-surprising standing. The Wildcats’ 27 points last week against Robinson were the most they have tallied all season in district play, but the 34 points allowed were also a season-high in conference. That defensive mark will likely need to improve as Centreville’s final four opponents have a combined record of 20-4.

The Cougars have won five straight in this series, but their margin-of-victory is barely three points per game. And no win in the stretch has been by more than seven points. But as hot as Oakton has been in 2008, Coach Joe Thompson‘s crew hopes to have this one locked up by half time.

No. 6 Chantilly (4-2, 1-2) at Robinson (3-3, 1-1) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
The Chargers previous three opponents have had a combined record of 16-2. Their next three are 7-11, so the Purple Platoon ought not be discouraged by their 1-2 conference record. Plus, the two losses are to No. 2 Oakton (6-0) and No. 4 Westfield (6-0). Mix in a stunning first-round, 17-14 playoff elimination at the hands of the Rams last season, and there is a certain recipe for Chantilly tenacity in south Fairfax on Friday.

Robinson, at .500, is entering a telling stretch of schedule. All four of its remaining opponents are .500 or better, with a 17-7 combined record.

No. 4 Westfield (6-0, 2-0) at Fairfax (3-3, 1-2) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
Bulldog Coach Tom Verbanic is 5-0 all-time against his former school — average spread: 40-8 — and has won 64 of his last 66 regular-season games. In the two games he has coached against at Fairfax, the Bulldogs are 2-0, outscoring the Rebels 58-6.

Fairfax is 2-0 when yielding the first points, but just 1-3 when scoring first. That stat might work in their favor on Friday, though. Westfield senior running back Jordon Anderson has 53 carries for 433 yards and nine touchdowns — in the last three weeks. Six of his nine scores came in the first half.

Liberty District                                                         
No. 10 Madison (4-2, 3-0) at W.T. Woodson (4-2, 2-0) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
The Warhawks enter riding a four-game winning streak, none bigger than last week’s 18-14 victory at Langley. Senior running back Sasha Vandalov has established himself as Madison’s go-to ball carrier, an accomplishment in a backfield littered with downhill runners.

The Cavaliers, historically, have suffered from severe post-Westfield trauma. They are just 7-12 after facing the Bulldogs in the last three seasons, including a 1-4 stretch last season that pushed them out of the postseason.

Madison has won the last three meetings in this series, with only one win by less than 18 points. But if Woodson can find its form of two weeks ago, the Cavaliers may show all these stats where to go. They need just two more wins to ensure their first above-.500 record since 2004, the season they last won the Northern Region title.

South Lakes (1-5, 0-3) at McLean (0-6, 0-3) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
Looking at their records, it is apparent the Seahawks and Highlanders are both desperate for a win. But neither has had much help from the schedule makers through six weeks.

South Lakes defeated the only opponent it faced with a losing record (Falls Church) and all five losses are to teams at .500 or better — those teams’ combined record is 21-8. None of its final four opponents have a winning record.

McLean, similarly, has only played one team with a losing record and three of its final four opponents are .500 or worse. Despite still having a goose egg in the win column, McLean is one of just six Northern Region teams to have scored in double digits every week — alongside Stone Bridge, Oakton, Edison, West Springfield, and West Potomac. But they allow 37.5 points per game.
 
The
last three games in this series have been decided by a combined 16
points, with the Seahawks’ only win coming last year, 21-14. But over those
three seasons, South Lakes boasts only one more overall victory than
McLean; these teams — despite having vastly contrasting offensive
styles — are almost dead even.

Langley (3-3, 2-1) at No. 1 Stone Bridge (6-0, 3-0) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
The Saxons have effectively fed the ball to senior running David Helmer throughout the season. But against a defensive front seven that features four Division I-A signees and yielded 0.13 yards per carry to South Lakes last week, Langley might want to mix in some short passes to keep the Bulldogs honest.

Stone Bridge’s lowest first-half output this season is 28 points. Langley has scored more than that in a game once this year, a 35-12 win against Marshall. The Bulldogs are 3-0 all-time in the series, the last two wins with 42-14 margin.

Marshall (3-3, 2-1) at Jefferson (1-5, 0-2) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
The Statesmen have exploited the patches in their schedule that they needed to do, recording a 3-0 record against teams with losing records. Five of their 10 overall opponents are currently 1-5 or worse, so Marshall is in line for a second-consecutive playoff run, provided it continues its success against those teams.

The Colonials may offer the most substantial challenge in that regard after its loss last week. Jefferson led Wakefield, 10-9, entering the final quarter, only to have the Warriors run up 28 unanswered points and coast to a deceptively one-sided win. The Colonials had two interceptions returned for scores, so keep an eye on Marshall senior defensive back Jamie Cleer.

Marshall has beaten Jefferson each of the last three seasons.

National District                                                            
J.E.B. Stuart (1-5, 0-3) at No. 3 Edison (6-0, 3-0) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
The Eagles have won 18 of their last 19 district games, including the postseason, and are 11-0 against the Raiders in Coach Vaughn Lewis‘ second stint as head coach. The last seven wins are by a combined — wait for it — 285-40.

Edison seniors Stephon Robertson and Angus Harper have combined for 1,071 yards on just 105 carries – 10.2 per attempt – and 15 touchdowns in six games, a stat to be updated weekly as it gets no less amazing. And although the Eagles did not have any special teams touchdowns in last week’s 38-0 win at Yorktown, they had four returns of 20 yards or more. Two were by junior Jerrell Haywood.

The last time these teams met at Edison, the Eagles scored 42 points — in the first quarter.

Falls Church (0-6, 0-3) at Mount Vernon (4-2, 2-1) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
The Jaguars have only beaten the Majors once since the 1990s — 36-0 in 2005, a year in which Mount Vernon finished 1-9.

Mount Vernon appears bound for a first-round, home playoff game. At 4-2, only one of its final four opponents has a record better than 2-4. Combined, those teams are 7-18.

Wakefield (2-4, 1-1) at Washington-Lee (3-3, 1-1) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
If the playoffs started today, the Warriors would own the tie-breaker over Robert E. Lee and be the No. 8 seed. The Generals would stand alone with the No. 7 seed.

So the implications are obvious for these teams that have not tasted the postseason in — literally — decades. The strength-of-schedule advantage after this game leans slightly towards Wakefield, whose opponents are 9-9. Washington-Lee’s road will be slightly tougher, as they are yet to face either Edison or Yorktown.

Washington-Lee senior running back Charlie Fuller‘s connection to Wakefield — he grew up in the Warriors’ district and would have gone there if not for a transfer — only adds the makings of a potential classic.

The Generals have taken five of the last six games in the series.

Patriot District                                                       
No. 8 South County (4-2, 3-0) at No. 5 West Springfield (4-2, 3-0) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
The Stallions provided one of the biggest upsets of last season, knocking off the then-one-loss Spartans, 35-31. In the game, West Springfield took a 31-28 lead with
two minutes remaining, only to have South County senior running back Titus Pennington take an
inside hand off and go 80 yards for the game-winning touchdown
.

In
the previous two meetings between the schools, the Spartans had outscored the
Stallions, 111-50.

This time around, West Springfield could not enter the game any hotter, having won four games in row and scoring 48.8 points per game in that stretch. And its defense forced 13 total turnovers last week against West Potomac (see below). South County enters as winner of four of its last five, though, with losses only to No. 3 Edison (22-3) and No. 4 Westfield (9-7).

But the bitter taste of last season has not left the mouth of West Springfield and its quarterback, Bryn Renner, who lives in the South County school district. The
Spartans were 10-1 against non-state champions in 2007. The lone loss
came on October 12 at South County.

 
Lee (1-5, 0-3) at Annandale (3-3, 2-1) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
Last year, a Lancer team still searching for its first win fell by three points to the Atoms at home. Lee has felt similar fourth-quarter heartache this season, but Annandale is much-improved from a year ago.

The Atoms are allowing fewer points and scoring more than they were at this time last season. But Lee seems destined for its second win sooner rather than later.

The X-factor will be the match-up of Atom wide receiver Melvin Robinson and Lancer defensive backs Jameel Pitt and Anton Bowman. Robinson may be second only to West Potomac’s Kristian Rodriguez as a big-play threat in the Northern Region. But Lee’s secondary has nine interceptions in the last three games, six by Pitt and Bowman. Pitt had three against the Wolverines alone.

No. 7
West Potomac (5-1, 2-1) at Lake Braddock (3-3, 1-2) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
After a surprising home loss to T.C. Williams, Lake Braddock returned to form with a 12-0 win over Lee for its first Patriot victory.

West Potomac, meanwhile, is coming off a loss for the first time in 2008. At West Springfield last Friday, the Wolverines coughed up possession 13 times to the Spartans — four fumbles lost, four interceptions thrown and five turnovers on downs.

Last year, West Potomac lost its first game in Week 6 to West Springfield, and went on to fall to the No. 5 seed in Division 6 due to losses in three of its last five games.

And in
this growing Patriot District rivalry, the teams have alternated wins
over the last eight games, including a split last year. Lake Braddock
trounced West Potomac, 41-0, in the regular season last year only to
have Wolverines eliminate the Bruins from the playoffs, 14-9, at Lake
Braddock. The home team is 7-1 since 2001. The lone exemption was last
year’s  opening-round playoff victory by
West Potomac.

T.C. Williams (1-5, 1-2) at Hayfield (1-5, 0-3) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
Despite their less-than-attractive record, the Titans have played great football three of the last four weeks. If they can repeat that quality of play, they will have little trouble dispatching the scrappy, but young and undersized, Hawks.

However, any Titan lapses in ball security and tackling will allow Hayfield junior quarterback Anton McCallum and freshman running back Steven Lynch to have a field day on T.C. Williams’ first Friday night game of the season.

The Titans have won the last two games in this series, average score: 30-14.

Non-District Games                                                        
No. 9 Herndon (4-2, 2-1) at Yorktown (4-2, 2-1) — Friday, October 10, 7:30 p.m.
This is annually one of the best non-district games all season and the 2008 edition should be no different. These two dark horses find themselves with quite realistic postseason aspirations. But it is the Hornets that may be in more need of a win.

They have yet to face Westfield or Oakton and, including Yorktown, Herndon’s last four opponents are a combined 19-5. That’s second only to district foe Centreville in schedule difficulty in the entire Northern Region. The Patriots’ final four opponents are a much more manageable 13-11.

Although Herndon has won all three meetings this decade, only one game was decided by more than a touchdown.

NORTHERN REGION WEEK 7:  BY THE NUMBERS
6 – There are six teams to have scored in double digits every game this year: No. 1 Stone Bridge (6-0), No. 2 Oakton (6-0), No. 3 Edison (6-0), No. 5 West Springfield (4-2), No. 7 West Potomac (5-1) and McLean (0-6).
0.13 –
Last week at South Lakes, the Stone Bridge defense held its opposition to 24 carries for 3 yards, an average of just 0.13 yards per carry.
20-4 – Centreville (1-5) has the most difficult final four weeks of any team in the Northern Region. It’s final four opponents, No. 4 Westfield, Mount Vernon, No. 6 Chantilly and No. 2 Oakton are combined 20-4.
42 – The last time Edison and J.E.B. Stuart met in Alexandria, Eagle senior running back Kevin Carter scored three touchdowns in the opening period. Edison posted 42 points in the first quarter that night.
9 – Westfield senior running back Jordon Anderson has 433 rushing yards and 9 touchdowns in the last three weeks.

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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WJLA (ABC 7) Partners with DigitalSports.com

Washington D.C. area high school and youth sports to be featured as part of innovative alignment between leading D.C. media properties


Washington D.C. – October 10, 2008 – ABC 7 WJLA and DigitalSports.com, the region’s top source for local youth and high school sports coverage, have announced a media partnership. The joint venture has been developed to highlight and promote dynamic youth sports coverage in the Washington D.C. metro area.  Visitors to www.wjla.com will now have the opportunity to access play-by-play coverage of local school sports events by simply typing in the key word “high school sports.”


DigitalSports is the premier source for local youth and high school sports multimedia offering up-to-the-minute videos, photos, headlines, stats, standings and more. Through this partnership Digital Sports information will become readily accessible to the WJLA audience.  Components of the media marriage include cross-branded web presence on the station’s website and the DigitalSports sites, as well as broadcast television coverage of sports highlights that will span the entire DC Metropolitan area.


“Our technology and operational infrastructure allow DigitalSports to capture and publish news, videos, photos, game results and more in a unique and scalable fashion,” said Rich Toland, General Manager of the DigitalSports D.C. Metro Team.  “Through our many partnerships and with the use of our proprietary technology, we can be in many places at one time.  We’re thrilled that our partnership with ABC 7 will allow even more students, teams and families to enjoy increased coverage and promotion of not only themselves and the games that they play, but also of the uplifting stories that come as a result of participating in organized sports.”


DigitalSports.com was established to highlight the positive aspects of high school and youth sports and the positive impact sports has on the individual and their community.  The goal of the DigitalSports network is to support the influence sports has on young-athletes by offering information, tools, services and tuition-awards to students across the country.  The DigitalSports.com Washington D.C. Metro portal, which can be found online at www.dcmetrodigitalsports.com , serves as a gateway to the various high school conference and county websites that reside within the D.C. Metro area.


For more information on DigitalSports programs, franchise opportunities, scholarships and awards, visit www.digitalsports.com.


About ABC 7 WJLA
ABC 7 WJLA is the Washington metropolitan area’s ABC affiliate. The website address is www.wjla.com. WJLA’s owner, Allbritton Communications Company, operates eight television stations in seven broadcast markets, including Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia and Washington, DC.  Allbritton Communications also owns and operates the political newspaper and website POLITICO and POLITICO.com.


About Digital Sports
DigitalSports is the source for your local sports and activities; providing members and guests with a single point of access to high school and club sports and activities around the country. By distributing professional and user-generated content, DigitalSports offers communities around the nation the opportunity to share and spotlight the accomplishments of their local youth.


DigitalSports’ mission is to deliver a positive, quality experience to its guests through their online tools and systems and their video and print information as well as providing innovative tools and resources to coaches and mentors.   DigitalSports operates as a new-media outlet within defined guidelines for preventing any publishing of inappropriate content.


The goal of DigitalSports(r) is to inform, entertain and inspire.  DigitalSports believes that the real heroes are to be found in our local communities; next door, in our homes and in our schools.  More information can be found at www.digitalsports.com.


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Football — A Weekend Preview

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, Washington D.C.

**Check back with DigitalSports throughout the week for video recaps of nearly every game in the Northern Region!!

Concorde District                                                        
Centreville (1-4, 0-2) at Robinson (2-3, 0-1) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
The Rams have won five of the last six games in this series, including playoff meetings in 2001, 2002 and 2004. The Wildcats hope to snap a three-game losing streak to the Rams tonight. Robinson’s three losses are to Stone Bridge, Westfield and West Springfield, all of whom partook in their respective regional final last year. No. 1 Stone Bridge and No. 4 Westfield are reigning VHSL AAA state champions.

The playoff aspirations of the loser are in serious jeopardy.

No. 7 Chantilly (4-1, 1-1) at No. 2 Oakton (5-0, 2-0) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
*Game will be covered by Jimmy Thomas — check back Saturday morning for a story, photos and highlights!
The Chargers have taken three straight games in this series, including a 23-14 win in the 2006 playoffs, but the Cougars won four of five before that. The annual playoff implications are obvious.

Last year at Chantilly, Oakton running back Trey Watts carried 13 times for 89 yards and three scores, while Chantilly running back Torrian Pace recorded 16 rushes for 84 yards and two touchdowns. Thanks to their deep supporting cast, the Chargers prevailed, 35-23, in a shootout. Expect less scoring this time around, but all the competitiveness — and all the consequences.

Fairfax (3-2, 1-1) at Herndon (3-2, 1-1) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
The winner of this clash of Concorde dark horses is guaranteed at least a share of third place in the district entering the second half of the regular season. The Rebels are 0-2 against teams with a winning record and – somehow – both of their losses came when scoring first. The Hornets only have one game left against a sub-.500 team, Week 9 at Robinson on the Rams’ Senior Night.

Since Fairfax joined the Concorde District in 2005, Herndon is 3-0 against them, average win:  40-6.

Liberty District                                                         
Madison (3-2, 2-0) at Langley (3-2, 2-0) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
The Warhawks enter riding a three-game winning streak, but it’s against opponents with a combined 3-12 record. But next three are against a combined 12-3 record. The Saxons’ only two losses came at No. 7 Chantilly and at No. 2 Oakton. Langley was without three-year starting quarterback Danny Pritchett and its leading-tackler, outside linebacker Austin Pritchett, in the latter.

Even if Madison falls for a fourth-straight game, the Vienna faithful need not lose hope. Despite having not had a sub-.500 record since 2000, Madison started 3-2 in both 2005 and 2006, recording a Week-6 loss in both seasons. And both times, the Warhawks won four of their final five games to qualify for the Division 5 playoffs.

McLean (0-5, 0-2) at Marshall (2-3, 1-1) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
These two teams have split the last eight games in this series, but the Statesmen have won three in a row against the Highlanders. This season, Marshall is 0-3 when scoring less than 13 points, 2-0 when putting up more than 13. It held Stuart to 64 total yards last week in a 28-0. McLean, although winless, has recorded double-digit points in every game.

The game is practically guaranteed to be close — five of the last six games have been decided by a touchdown or less, including Marshall’s 28-21 win last year.

No. 1 Stone Bridge (5-0, 2-0) at South Lakes (1-4, 0-2) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
Every season these teams have met, the Bulldog point output has progressively increased – 35 points in 2005, 42 in 2006, 54 in 2007. The South Lakes has one of the best collection of athletes around, but Stone Bridge is appearing to be a once-in-a-decade team. The Bulldog offense is scoring just less than 46 points per first half and last week senior running back Daniel Allen carried four times for 167 yards and four touchdowns.

Although one can’t anticipate 42 yards per carry from Allen again, the 8.9 average Stone Bridge held as a team may well be repeated. There is a shortage of adjectives to describe this team. Oh, by the way, the defense has four Division I-A signees in its front seven.

National District                                                            
No. 3 Edison (5-0, 2-0) at No. 10 Yorktown (4-1, 2-0) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
En route to a state title game appearance in 2006, the Patriots defeated the visiting Eagles, 22-14. That game stands as Edison’s only loss to a National District opponent in its last 18 games and its only loss to Yorktown in the last five meetings in the series, including an Eagle win in the 2006 Northern Region semifinals.

To repeat the success from two seasons ago, the Patriots must slow the two-headed Edison monster at running back. Seniors Stephon Robertson and Angus Harper have combined for 860 yards on just 84 carries – 10.2 per attempt – and 12 touchdowns in five games. The Eagles also have six special teams’ touchdowns, so the Patriot punt unit should probably aim for the snack bar to be safe.

Mount Vernon (3-2, 1-1) at J.E.B. Stuart (1-4, 0-2) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
The Majors are poised for a second-consecutive playoff run. At 1-1 in the National District, they only have one opponent in their last five games with a record better than 1-4 overall. Standing in their way is a Raider team coming off its worst offensive output of the season, when they totaled just 64 offensive yards in a 28-0 loss at Marshall on Friday.

If Stuart can put together the game it had against McLean, or the first half it had at Lake Braddock in Week 3, the Raiders may surprise the National District’s most physically overbearing team. If not, Mount Vernon may repeat its historical success against Stuart, which gave them eight straight wins. The average final in that span is 41-9.

The last time the Raiders beat the Majors – 29-6 in 1999 – they forced nine fumbles. Mount Vernon started 0-7 that year.

Washington-Lee (2-3, 0-1) at Falls Church (0-5, 0-2) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
The Generals are coming off an emotional home loss to the Majors in
their first district game of the year. But last season, Washington-Lee
beat Falls Church for the first time since the mid-90’s. So there is no
team the Jaguars would rather get their first win against than the
Generals, who are looking for their first winning season since 1993.

Patriot District                                                       
No. 5 West Potomac (5-0, 2-0) at No. 6 West Springfield (3-2, 2-0) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
*Game will be covered by Phil Murphy — check back Saturday morning for a story, photos and highlights!
The Spartans have taken three of the last four games — and five of the
last seven — from the Wolverines, with an average score line of 39-29
in favor of West Springfield. The last time these teams met
on the Springfield Field Turf was one of West Potomac’s two wins, an 81-74 triple-overtime track meet in 2006.

The game tied a national record for most points in a loss and was the
second-highest scoring game in the 93-year history of the Virginia High School
League — Kingsport, Tenn. defeated Norton, 173-0, on Sept 25, 1925.

Since West Springfield opened the season with losses at No. 1 Stone
Bridge (5-0) and to No. 3 Edison (5-0), they have won three in a row in
impressive fashion, averaging 49 points per game. Meanwhile, the Wolverines, although unbeaten, have sputtered in
recent weeks.

West Potomac took two overtimes to beat Lee (1-4), needing a
blocked would-be game-winning 22-yard field goal in the first extra
period. Then last week, the Wolverines trailed Hayfield (1-4) for much
of the game before taking control and escaping, 17-7.

This match-up of Patriot District favorites has immense playoff
bearing, even this early in the season. And despite a degree of
uncertainty, there is one guarantee:  Points.
 
Annandale (2-3, 1-1) at Hayfield (1-4, 0-2) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
The Atoms have beaten every sub-.500 team they’ve faced, a stat that will be put to the test over the next three weeks as their next three games are against teams with losing records. Annandale’s three losses are to No. 2 Oakton, No. 7 Chantilly and No. 6 West Springfield.

The Hawks have not beaten the Atoms since their reclassification to Division 5. Their last victory over Annandale came in 2005, a season in which the Atoms won their first of two straight Patriot District titles.

Lake Braddock
(2-3, 0-2) at Lee (1-4, 0-2) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
The Lancers rocked the Bruins, 31-17, in 2005, their first season in the Patriot District. But since then, Lake Braddock has controlled the series, winning the last two meetings by a combined 55-6.

Last year at home, the Bruins scored all three of their touchdowns from further than 45 yards away, but nearly every contributor from that game has graduated. But, with how Lake Braddock lost at home to T.C. Williams last Saturday, it is just as desperate as Lee – who blew a 10-point lead to South County last week with :46 seconds left – to notch its first Patriot win and avoid a dreaded 0-3 district start.    

No. 9 South County (3-2, 2-0) at T.C. Williams (1-4, 1-1) — Saturday, October 4, 1 p.m.
Last season, the both teams were 2-3 when they met in Week 6. Senior QB Chris Mitchell carried 26 times for 152 yards and two touchdowns in a 22-18 Stallion win. Then-junior defensive back Karlos Morgan added a 53-yard, fake-punt-pass-interception-return touchdown to close out the scoring. But both teams scored three times; the four point difference was solely from PATs.

The Titans looked like a new team last week in a 20-3 road win at Lake Braddock, but they are 0-4 at their new home stadium, the location of this game.

Non-District Games                                                        
No. 8 W.T. Woodson (4-1, 2-0) at No. 4 Westfield (5-0, 2-0) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
In the fourth year of this mid-season, non-district series, the
Bulldogs hold a 95-16 scoring advantage and have swept the three
previous meetings. And after all three games, the Cavaliers have looked
somewhat shell-shocked, recording an aggregate 7-12 record for the rest
of the season after playing Westfield.

Last year, Woodson entered the Week-5, Homecoming Game with a 4-1
record, only to fall 31-0, lose four of its final five games and,
consequently, miss the postseason.

Jefferson (1-4, 0-2) at Wakefield (1-4, 1-1) — Friday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.
The Warriors have played their best football of the season in their
last two games. Wakefield beat Falls Church two weeks ago for its
first win, then hung close to perennial power Edison last week,
trailing by just two scores at the start of the fourth quarter.

The Colonials have owned this series, winning the last five meetings.
But Jefferson has lost four in a row after opening the season with a
one-point, overtime home win over Falls Church. Four of the Colonials’ final five
games are against teams with a losing record.

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By: Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager/DigitalSports.com


West Springfield quarterback Bryn Renner won the week 5 Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week after leading the Spartans to a 48-27 win over Annandale.

He threw for a staggering 322 yards on 20-of-24 passing with four touchdowns and no interceptions.Bryn also carried the ball 12 times for 47 yards and a score.

“I am honored to win the award but I think its a team award” said Renner.

“I didn’t do it all by myself so I give credit to the O-line, Brandon [Bailey], Andy [Stallings], Tucker [Tobin] and everyone else.”

“I thought it was a whole team effort and I appreciate it.”

Renner has committed to play quarterback on scholarship and will play baseball as a preferred walk-on at the University of North Carolina in the fall.

Click here for a complete list of winners


Cox Communications is proud to serve the residents of
Fairfax County, and is honored to present the Cox ON DEMAND High School
Performer of the Week trophy award to the standout player from a Fairfax County
team weekly.

Please send nominations to awatts@digitalsports.com

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