T C Williams High School | Archive | November, 2008

Virginia AAA Division 6 Semifinal: Oscar Smith 10, Oakton 7

By Greg Young, 2008 Annandale Graduate
 and Jeffery Gibert, West Potomac Senior
Digital Sports Interns

DigitalSports coverage of the 2008 Football Playoffs is proudly brought to you by Dynamic Sports Performance of Northern Virginia

*Check the tabs on the top-left of the article for complete video highlights and a photo gallery from Saturday’s playoff game*
 
With less than six minutes left in the fourth quarter of Oakton’s Virginia AAA Division 6 state semifinal against visiting — and heavily favored — Oscar Smith, the Cougars looked primed-and-ready to pull off a stunning upset.
 
The Cougars and Tigers, a highly-regarded football program from Chesapeake that gave Westfield its only challenge on it’s road to the state championship last year, were tied with one touchdown a piece and Oakton had driven to Oscar Smith’s 15-yard line. All the Cougars had to do was run out the clock and kick a field goal to secure a berth into next week’s state finale.
 
Oakton ran a seemingly fail-safe draw play, but things were horribly wrong. Oscar Smith defensive end Jamar Graves went around the block, entered the backfield and stripped the ball.

And, as it turned out, he helped spark Oscar Smith to a 10-7 victory and its own date in that state finale.
 
“Graves is an all-state defensive end,” Tigers’ Coach Richard Morgan said. “It was huge. But that’s what good teams do.”
 
After that turnover, Oscar Smith not only had the ball but also plenty of time for one final drive. As they had all game, the Tigers went to its star wide receiver, Tim Smith, who had a huge 35-yard catch with two minutes remaining to put his team inside the Cougars’ 5-yard line. From there, kicker Ryan Trotman connected from 24 yards away for the game-winning score.

Smith, who will attend the University of Virginia next season on an athletic scholarship, finished with eight catches for 140 yards and accounted for Oscar Smith’s only touchdown on the day.
 
“Me and Tim do this all of the time,” said Phillip Sims, the junior quarterback for the Tigers who completed 19-of-33 passes for 243 yards. “I gave him the opportunity; he made the play. So when he made the catch, I was relieved, but I knew he was going to do it all of the time.”
 
Smith reflected the same sentiment, saying he promised that if Sims threw the ball up to him he would, “come down with it.”
 
Although Oscar Smith had its lowest point total of the season, it stayed in the game with a stout defense. They held Oakton to 250 total yards, and limited backup quarterback Ryan Harris to 95 yards passing and one touchdown, which came with 2 minutes, 49 second left in the first half.

Harris was forced to enter the game when dynamic Oakton senior quarterback Chris Coyer was knocked unconscious during the first quarter of play and never returned.  
 
Coyer was carted off in a stretcher after being down on the field for more than 15 minutes and was taken to the hospital.

The extent of his injuries — which Coyer suffered when he was sandwiched between a pair of Oscar Smith defenders and one of them inadvertently hit him in the head — are unknown. But he was alert when he left the field and did have both feeling and movement in his extremities.
 
For Oscar Smith, the win was the first time since 1998 that a team has gone into a Northern Region stadium and won, a fact that was not lost on the team afterwards.

“There have been a lot of great teams from the Eastern Region that have come up here and lost,” Morgan said. “Getting this win is huge and it proves what a good football team we are.”

Despite the three-and-a-half hour drive, Oscar Smith fans filled their opposing section, creating an atmosphere that the team said was very friendly.
 
“It was crazy,” Smith said. “We had a lot of fans that came out. [I was] surprised about that, so our stands were packed when we got here and warmin’ up, so that was a good thing.”
 
Meanwhile, Oakton’s storybook season ends at 13-1. Although they were heavy underdogs against a traditionally strong Oscar Smith team, the Cougars led the Tigers at half time, 7-0.  
 
“They played just like we thought they would,” Morgan said. “They are tough, they played disciplined and they played well.”

Oscar Smith is currently #11 in the USA Today High School football poll and will face Osbourn for the state title in Blacksburg on Saturday.
 
“We are definitely ready,” Sims said. “We are going to go out there, play our hardest, and we’ll see what happens.”

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Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By: Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager/DigitalSports.com

**Click HERE to see complete highlights from this past Friday night’s playoff game!

Senior Chris Coyer accounted for five touchdowns in the Northern Region championship game Saturday as Oakton routed visiting Chantilly 52-14 earning himself the Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week award.

“We played really well as a team” said Coyer before heading to practice. “Our preparation and everything throughout the week was great. We had a great team effort and came out with the win.”

The all-district quarterback scored three times on the ground with runs of 4, 2 and 1 yards respectively and had touchdown passes from 50 and 7 yards. Coyer finished the day with 184 yards on 9-of-15 passing and 42-yards rushing.

The undefeated Cougars will once again play at home Saturday at 1:30 as nationally ranked and also unbeaten Eastern Region champ Oscar Smith comes to town.
  


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.


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Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager, Northern Region

**Click HERE to see complete highlights from this past Friday night’s playoff game!

Senior Stephon Robertson is the Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week after leading undefeated Edison to a 47-7 win over Madison in a Northern Region Division 5 semifinal last week.

Robertson, the National District Defensive Player of the Year, ran for 136 yards and three touchdowns on just 11 carries against the Warhawks — in one half of action — and added eight tackles on defense. 

Edison will meet also undefeated and top-ranked Stone Bridge, the defending Virginia AAA Division 5 state champions, for the fourth consecutive time in the Division 5 title game at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Edison.

“It’s going to be one of the greatest games in the state that night,” said Robertson about the big match-up. “I can guarantee you.

“We have two undefeated teams going head-to-head. They have a great offense; we have a great offense. They have a great defense; we have a great defense. And so it’s going to be a battle on both sides of the ball.”

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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Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By: Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager/DigitalSports.com

**Click HERE to see complete highlights from Friday nights playoffs game**

Senior runningback Torrian Pace led Chantilly to a 47-38 win over Annandale with 368-yards rushing and five touchdowns earning him the Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week. He totaled 421-yards of total offense also catching a 53-yard pass from quarterback Roger Strittmatter for a first quarter touchdown.

“This goes to my O-line and everyone that was blocking for me” said Pace before heading out to practice Wednesday. “Without them, I probably woudn’t have gotten this award.”

The Chargers advanced to the semifinals and will face defending AAA state champion Westfield for a berth in the Northern Region championship game.

“We have to believe we can do it” added Pace. “[Westfield] is a very good team, very well rounded. We have to play to the best of our ability and not make any mistakes.”

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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Softball: Jennie Finch Clinic Coverage

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

*CLICK HERE for video highlights.

*CLICK HERE for photos from the event.

The lobby of the Diamond Sports Training facility in Sterling, Va., was saturated with elementary and middle school softball pitchers early Sunday morning. All had at least one piece of memorabilium in her possession, standing and chatting in nervous anticipation.

One in particular was able to balance five softballs in her nine-year-old arms, not missing a beat in conversation.

“These two are for Chelsea and Meghan,” said the girl with an irrevocable smile, circling the diamond of her club team’s starting infield by name. “This is for Ashley and my sister.”

She then nodded to the ball, hat, rolled-up poster and jersey tucked under her right arm.

“And these are for me.”

Just seconds after the giddy gaggle was ushered down to the facility’s back quarters, the source of the girls’ excitement walked through the employee-entrance glass doors.

Bearing incorrigible grace on a 6-feet, 1-inch, Olympic frame, the most famous softball player of all-time — and arguably the sport’s most dominant force ever — Jennie Finch, had arrived for one of her myriad softball clinics that she hosts nationwide each year.

“I play softball and I’m living my dreams out,” Finch said. “It’s so exciting to be able meet the future softballers and see the excitement of our game and of U.S.A. softball.

“Just to be able to be a positive role model to these young girls, it’s an incredible honor. It’s the best part about doing what I do.”

Finch, who was in town for a national autograph signing event, agreed to host the clinic on short notice and with smaller-than-typical attendance. Her two-day camp in Williamsport, Pa. in early December had sold out its 400 slots over three weeks ago.

“When we contacted her, she was really excited about it,” said John Lechler, Director of Softball Operations at Diamond Sports Training. “She’d basically rather do this than an autograph show … I was kind of expecting a little bit of a prima donna attitude, but she was awesome. She answered every question and it was absolutely great to have her in here.”

Because of the haste in organizing the clinic, an important vacancy wasn’t filled until the week of the event: Finch’s catcher for her pitching demonstration. So Stone Bridge alumnus Kayla Lechler, a 2007 AAA Virginia first-team all-state selection, was asked to fill in and agreed — without much resistance.

“It was an amazing opportunity to catch for someone who not only has been in the Olympics, but has done so well in college,” said Lechler, a freshman at Columbia University in New York, N.Y. “I was also very nervous because, of course, she’s going to be the best pitcher I ever caught for.”

Finch, 28, even asked to exchange numbers with Lechler in case she needs a training partner whenever Finch travels to New York.

“It’s great for them to know I was once in their shoes, dreaming of being an Olympian,” said Finch, whose clinic on Sunday was sandwiched between similar demonstrations in New York and Chicago and a charity luncheon Indianapolis within a week. “[I’m] encouraging them to go after their dreams and share the love of our game. There’s only a select few that will go on to be Olympians, but it’s about the game.

“This game teaches you so much beyond the playing field, such as teamwork, discipline, and leadership.”

The autograph session, not surprisingly, doubled its estimated duration. But Finch signed, and signed, posing for countless photos with an admirable genuineness.

She even momentarily stopped her question-and-answer session to offer an autograph to a girl who had to leave early.

The event left moms misty-eyed and the girls beaming.

“It’s special. You almost have to pinch yourself every time [those reactions] happen,” said Finch, 42-2 all-time when pitching for the U.S. National team. “There are so many great things this game has given me and if I can relay those things to younger girls — and share the excitement of it — then it’s great.

“And I want to do it.”

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Football: First-Round Playoff Highlights

First-Round Playoff Highlights — Northern Region


Check
the schedule below to see when your favorite game’s highlights will be
available on DigitalSports. Completed game packages are listed as
active links and  posted on the individual school and team pages.

**FULL SCHEDULE POSTED.**

*Listed rankings are by respective seed in playoff bracket

Saturday                                                               

Division 5

No. 1 Edison 37, No. 8 Lee 7Videos added!!!RECAP

No. 2 Stone Bridge 58, No. 7 Jefferson 7RECAP

No. 3 Mount Vernon 17, No. 6 Washington-Lee 10 — RECAP AVAILABLE FRIDAY: Tech Difficulty

Division 6
No. 3 Chantilly 47, No. 6 Annandale 38RECAP

No. 4 West Springfield 72, No. 5 W.T. Woodson 47RECAP

Monday                                                                  

Division 6

No. 1 Oakton 30, No. 8 South County 13RECAP

No. 2 Westfield 41, No. 7 Herndon 22RECAP

Tuesday                                                                 

Division 5

No. 4 Madison 28, No. 5 Yorktown 7RECAP

Previous Weeks’ Highlights                                   

Week 10

Week 9

Week 8

Week 7

Week 6

Week 5

Week 4

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Football: A Weekend Preview — Regional Quarterfinals — All Scores

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


**CLICK HERE FOR FINAL FRIDAY NIGHT SCORES FROM ACROSS THE NORTHERN REGION!

Division 5 Playoffs                                                
No. 8 Lee (3-7) at No. 1 Edison (10-0) — November 7 at 7:30 p.m.
This is a rematch of the Week 1 game at Edison, an Eagle win could not have been more one-sided.

Junior returner Chris Washington took the opening kickoff 86 yards to the crib and his older brother Corey Washington returned a low, bouncing punt 71 yards for a score.

Even without running back Angus Harper in the backfield, the Edison ground game thrived. Senior Stephon Robinson, er um, Robertson carried nine times for 167 yards and two touchdowns.

But the Lancers would be the first to tell you that was one of their worst showings of the season. And this secondary is still amongst the most underrated in the Northern Region.

That secondary, however, is going up against junior quarterback Levi Barber, who is showed serious veteran leadership in last week’s last-minute drive to beat Chantilly on the road, something his older brother, Ben Barber, could not do last year at home.

If Lee is going to stand a chance — Edison backfield health notwithstanding — Patriot District Player of the Year Anthony Nsekela must raise heck on his pass rush and the Lancers will have to win the turnover margin… comfortably.

No. 7 Jefferson (3-7) at No. 2 Stone Bridge (10-0) — November 7 at 7:30 p.m.
Two weeks ago at Jefferson, Stone Bridge broke the school scoring record for the third time this season, hitting the 70-point plateau with 4 minutes, 22 seconds left in the third quarter. Or 4:21… or 4:20… it was hard to tell with the running clock.

The Bulldogs haven’t had their starters play a full 48 minutes all season and have a possible — read: probable — fourth-straight Northern Region final against Edison looming in two weeks. It makes you wonder if coach Mickey Thompson will begin keeping his starters in longer than usual to maintain complete-game conditioning.

According to Article XII, Section B of the VHSL football guidelines a 35-point mercy rule results in a running clock during the second half “only during regular season games.”

So, with a true 48 minutes to be played and the potential for extended time for its starters, Stone Bridge will break the single-game scoring record for the fourth time this year.

No. 6 Washington-Lee (5-5) at No. 3 Mount Vernon (8-2) — November 7 at 7:30 p.m.
Generals, congratulations on reaching the playoffs for the first time in 33 seasons. We cordially invite you to a most-expenses-paid trip to Old Town Alexandria to face the hottest Division 5 team not named “Bulldogs” or “Eagles.”

Mount Vernon has won eight of the nine meetings this decade, including a 12-10 victory through driving rain at Washington-Lee on September 26.

Expect the Majors to key on General senior running back/ quarterback/ return man Charlie Fuller, whose speed generated 162 yards and an 82-yard touchdown run in that mid-season meeting.

If Washington-Lee can strike early, Mount Vernon will be on upset alert.

No. 5 Yorktown (6-4) at No. 5 Madison (6-4) — November 7 at 7:30 p.m.
The Patriots’ only win this decade over the Warhawks came this season, 23-7, in Arlington.

In that game, Yorktown brought its big stick, recording all four scores from over 40 yards away.

Senior athlete Kyle Toulouse scored an 80-yard run on the game’s first play and threw a 76-yard touchdown pass to junior receiver Mike Veith later in the first quarter. In the second quarter, junior quarterback Sam Nottingham connected with junior running Charles Banks for a 50-yard score. Then, in the fourth, junior kicker C.J. Bartholomew drilled a 40-yard field goal.

Madison sustained several drives, but only netted one touchdown. Increased offensive efficiency from the Warhawks would offset the constant Patriot big-play threat and assuredly breed the most hotly-contested game in Division 5 this week.

Division 6 Playoffs                                                
No. 8 South County (6-4) at No. 1 Oakton (10-0) — November 7 at 7:30 p.m.
Last week, in a 38-13 win over Herndon, undefeated Oakton secured its first perfect regular season in the 41-year history of the school. This week, the Cougars will face the man who led them in 11 of those 41 seasons, fourth-year Stallion head coach Pete Bendorf.

Bendorf’s Oakton team won a Northern Region title in 2002, his final season in Vienna before becoming assistant athletic director at Madison, an office he held until the South County head coaching position opened.

The Stallions secured the eighth seed in Division 6 for the second straight season. Last year, South County fell to eventual state champion Westfield in the first round, 40-13.

South County and Oakton have never met before. In fact, this game, along with Woodson at West Springfield, is one of just two first-round playoff games that is not a rematch of a regular season meeting from earlier this year.

The Stallion mantra all year has been “Tough Starts Now.” That mindset will not be needed more than on Friday night, as South County is set to face the most physical team in Divison 6.

No. 7 Herndon (6-4) at No. 2 Westfield (8-2) — November 7 at 7:30 p.m.
In what was not only the upset of the year, but also the most thrilling game of the season, the Hornets snapped the Bulldogs’ VHSL-high 22-game winning streak in Week 8 on Herndon’s Homecoming Saturday, 29-28 in double overtime.

The Bulldogs had a touchdown pass by senior back-up quarterback Mack Spees called back for a correct, but likely inconsequential block in the back late in regulation. They scored the would-be game-tying touchdown in the second overtime, but elected to go for go two points and the win.

But the Hornets batted down the decisive pass attempt and, in an instant, shifted the balance of power in the Concorde District from Westfield to Oakton.

Herndon, though, has failed to win a game since defeating the reigning Northern Region and state champions. In fact, it is allowing 39.5 points and over 320 rushing yards per game in back-to-back losses at Robinson and Oakton.

Confidence ought not be a concern for the Hornets, but Bulldog senior running back Jordon Anderson should be. Anderson narrowly missed his tenth 100-yard rushing performance of the season in as many games in last Friday’s season finale.

Still, he has 1,483 rushing yards and 23 touchdowns this year, totals that both comfortably lead the region.

No. 6 Annandale (7-3) at No. 3 Chantilly (7-3) — November 7 at 7:30 p.m.
These teams have met six times this decade, with the Chargers winning five games, but the last four meetings have occurred in early September. But both teams are perennial playoff participants, so you just had a feeling a postseason meeting was inevitable.

Last season, Chantilly was unceremoniously bounced by red hot Robinson, 17-14, at home to abbreviate the Chargers’ honeymoon year following its state championship game run in 2006.

But they run into an Annandale team that has hit its stride. The Atoms have won five in a row overall and have not lost a road game since September 5 at unbeaten Oakton. Last week, Annandale locked up a share of its third Patriot District title in four years with a dominant 28-7 home win over South County.

Atom senior everything Cason Kynes threw for four touchdown passes and intercepted two Stallion attempts while lined up at safety.

In the teams’ Week 3 meeting, a 31-20 Chantilly win, Annandale sophomore wide receiver Melvin Robinson held his coming-out party, scoring a 65-yard touchdown in the first quarter en route to a five-grab, 136-yard night. Stopping him will assuredly be a top priority for the Charger defense.

No. 5 W.T. Woodson (7-3) at No. 4 West Springfield (7-3) — November 7 at 7:30 p.m.
Oh, man.

Scanning the first-round match-ups as projected final Power Points were being calculated late last Friday night, this is the game that stuck out — well, outside of Westfield’s chance for revenge against Herndon.

This is the poster child for why an eight-team playoff format works. Two teams with regular seasons deserving of bonus football that never would have met otherwise, squaring off with both of their promising seasons on the line.

Just by reading style of play, Woodson should win the time-of-possession battle by a substantial margin. But can they slow West Springfield’s passing attack and newly-found backfield gem, Dan Collins, who torched Lee for 269 yards and three second-half touchdowns in a 46-12 home win in the regular season finale?

The Spartans are second in the Northern Region in scoring with 41.2 points per game; the Cavaliers are ninth with 30.0 points per game.

This game, along with South County at Oakton, is one of just two first-round playoff games in either D-5 or D-6 that is not a rematch of a regular season meeting from earlier in the year.
 
For what its worth, the teams last met in 2000, a 19-17 Woodson win.

E-mail: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By: Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager/ Northern Region

**Please Click the Video Tab Above the Photo for Highlights**

It is common place to see West Potomac senior Kristian Rodriguez score touchdowns. But it was what he did in addition to catching passes in a 34-22 win over T.C. Williams Friday night that earned him the Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week Award.

Along with his 95 yards and two touchdowns on five receptions, Rodriguez, starting in just his second game defensively, recorded three interceptions.

“It feels great,” said K-Rod, while receiving the award after school on Wednesday. “I have been wanting to get one of these for the whole season and I finally got it.”

In a Week 7 win over Lake Braddock, Kristian had 12 catches for 213 yards and three scores.

Rodriguez finished the year with over 1,000 yards receiving and 15 touchdowns. He will attend college next year but is undecided where at this time.
 
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: West Potomac 34, T.C. Williams 22

By Jeffery Gibert
West Potomac Senior/ DigitalSports Intern

** Video interviews available HERE.

The West Potomac seniors come up huge in the last game of their high school careers. They ended a four-game losing skid — after starting the season on a five-game winning streak — with a 34-22 win over visiting T.C. Williams on Senior Night on Friday.

“We had an awesome game tonight,” Wolverine senior June Johnson said.  “I came out here, I did my thing, and the team did their thing.”

Added junior wide receiver Shawn Lee: “We came out with intensity today.”

The Wolverines played aggressively on both sides of the ball. They posted their third-highest point total of the season, while also forcing six turnovers. But it was West Potomac senior athlete Kristian Rodriguez who owned the night. Coach Eric Henderson started him both ways last week in a five-point loss to co-Patriot District champion Annandale, and it paid dividends.  

On Friday, he hauled in five passes for 95 yards and two touchdowns. Rodriguez also went over a Titan defender for an apparent third touchdown catch, but it was brought back because of a penalty. Rodriguez also led the team on the defensive side of the ball with three interceptions in just his second game of playing both ways.

“I don’t really know what the change was for, but the change was good,” Rodriguez said.  “We got these picks.”

Added senior linebacker Anton Hatch: “We played a good game … we executed on both sides of the ball.”

Other West Potomac seniors played well on defense, too. Defensive back Chris Montgomery and linebacker Aaron Loney, a team captain, both intercepted passes and defensive back Sammy Barrios recovered a fumble.

“[It was my] last home game as a senior,” Montgomery said. “It started four years ago. [It’s] sad to see it end.”

Loney has been plagued by injury for most of the team’s losing streak. So there was added importance for him to be out there for Senior Night and have the performance that he did.

“It’s been a rough season, you know, dealing with injuries and coming off a four-game losing streak,” Loney said. “It’s good to finish off with a win.”

Junior defensive back Cortez Taylor grabbed an interception for T.C. Williams right before the end of the first quarter and returned it for a touchdown to pull within 7-6. Minutes later, it looked as if it was all falling apart again for the Wolverines as Taylor picked off another pass, but it was called back by a penalty.  

That gave the Wolverines a fresh, new breath of air and they responded with three touchdowns in a span of just 3 minutes, 51 seconds.  All three scores were tosses by senior quarterback Cole Walter to Rodriguez, Lee, and junior wide receiver Will Rosenkranz.

“That was a big four-minute span for us,” Walter said. “We felt we had to blow the game open to get our swagger back.”

With a commanding 27-14 lead at the half, the Wolverines never looked back and worked on their running game.  Senior tailback Daniel Baker had a breakout game with 112 all-purpose yards — 86 rushing and 26 receiving.

“We came out tough,” Baker said. “It was a rivalry game. We had to beat them.”

T.C. Williams did not just bow down, though.  Senior running back Abu Karmara fought hard the whole game with 18 carries for 83 yards. The Titans outscored the Wolverines in the second half, but it was not enough.

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Football: Week 10 Highlights

Week 10 Highlights — Northern Region


Check
the schedule below to see when your favorite game’s highlights will be
available on DigitalSports. Completed game packages are listed as
active links and are posted on the individual school and team pages.

**FULL SCHEDULE POSTED.**

Saturday                                                               

No. 1 Stone Bridge 42, No. 7 W.T. Woodson 14

No. 2 Oakton 38, No. 8 Herndon 13 RECAP

No. 3 Edison 20, No. 4 Chantilly 17 RECAP

No. 9 Annandale 28, No. 5 South County 7RECAP

West Potomac 34, T.C. Williams 22

Sunday                                                                  

No. 6 Westfield 58, Centreville 40RECAP

No. 10 West Springfield 46, Robert E. Lee 12RECAP

Tuesday                                                                 

Robinson 49, Fairfax 14
RECAP

Falls Church 27, Stuart 12RECAP

No. 10 Mount Vernon 31, Wakefield 20
RECAP

Previous Weeks’ Highlights                                   

Week 9

Week 8

Week 7

Week 6

Week 5

Week 4

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