By E. Shawn
Aylsworth
Managing Editor
COLUMBUS
– Kickoff at 7 p.m. local time of the Nov. 21 Class 4A southern semistate showdown
between fifth-ranked Indianapolis Cathedral and top-ranked Columbus East?
Heatless.
Trading
touchdowns in the first four minutes of perhaps the state’s most highly anticipated
Final Four clash? Breathless.
Committing
six second-half turnovers of a 10-all game with a chance at a state finals
berth hanging in the balance? Reckless.
But
that’s how it went down for unbeaten host Columbus East in an absolutely frigid
Friday night football affair. After opening the second half with an 11-play
drive that resulted in a missed 36-yard field goal attempt, the Olympians’ next
seven possessions went – beyond shockingly, in all honesty – like this:
Interception.
Interception returned for touchdown. Fifteen-yard punt that led to touchdown. Interception that led to field goal. Fumble that led to touchdown.
Fumble that led to touchdown. Interception.
Yipes. I repeat, YIPES.
“You
just can’t make those kinds of mistakes against a good team like that,” said
Columbus East eighth-year coach Bob Gaddis. “We really moved the ball well in
the first half but just couldn’t get anything going in the second half.”
Nooooooooo
foolin’. Not surprisingly, a team with nearly unparalleled postseason history
such as Cathedral (the Irish own six state titles) took full advantage. And for
the most part, it was one of Indiana’s finest quarterbacks that the Irish
torched en route to the rout.
Columbus
East QB Dusty Kiel entered this fray with a very famous surname and the sparkling
credentials – 145 of 218 for 2,954 yards and 34 touchdowns with only four
interceptions – to live up to it. And the evening certainly began brightly enough
when the 6’3” senior connected on his first three passes in going 5 of 6 for 77
yards on an initial drive that culminated with a nine-yard TD toss to sophomore
Shane Henderson that evened the game at 7.
(Cathedral
junior QB Kofi Hughes had opened the scoring with a 51-yard option keeper to
the right on the game’s fifth play, breaking a tackle just past the line of
scrimmage and scooting down the Cathedral sideline for the score.)
But
in the second half of this bitterly cold and bitterly contested battle, Cathedral’s
halftime adjustments fully stymied the Olympian leader. After once again
starting a half off on fire – Kiel hit four of his first five passes for 53
yards in moving East to the Cathedral 17 prior to senior Matt Wilson’s field
goal try that was pulled right – an absolute nightmare ensued for the strong-armed Indiana University recruit.
On
2nd and 10 from the East 42, Kiel’s deep pass down the left sideline
floated and was picked off by Cathedral senior defensive back Ryan Foley, who
returned it nearly 30 yards to the Olympians’ 47. Although the O “D” swelled up
and forced a punt, the subsequent kick by junior Scott Miller was downed inside
the East 10 for the second time on the night, setting the Os up on their own
6-yard line.
Ruh-roh.
Three plays later, Kiel’s pass over the middle was slightly behind his receiver
but right on target for Irish DB Jake Zupancic. The 5’11” junior snagged the
errant throw at the East 35 and weaved his way to the end zone, breaking the
tie and putting Cathedral up 17-10 following Miller’s extra point with 1:45
left in the third quarter.
Trailing
for the first time since 8:00 showed on the clock in the game’s opening period,
East stumbled through a three-and-out response that only got worse when Henderson
shanked a 15-yard punt to the right. Cathedral (11-2) needed only 1:19 to go 42
yards in six plays, with junior running back Nick Najem scoring from one yard
out off right tackle to give the Irish a two-TD lead at 10:58 of the final stanza.
Taking
over at his own 35 following the kickoff, Kiel threw a 10-yard pass that was
picked off by senior linebacker Ollie Ware and returned seven yards to the
Olympians’ 38. The East defense tightened once again, but Miller’s 35-yard
field goal made it a three-possession lead with only 7:23 remaining in the
game.
Any
faint hopes that were left for the orange-clad faithful following pass plays of
seven and 18 yards were dashed when senior RB Joumeel McLaurine fumbled on a draw
play, with Cathedral senior LB Matt Falvey recovering at the East 42.
At
this point it simply became too difficult to justify observing, ironically, a
meltdown of a team with such promise in weather that might very well cost me my
toes. Suffice to say that Hughes scored on a nine-yard run, Columbus East (13-1)
turned the ball over once more, Hughes punctuated the second-half onslaught
with a 10-yard run, and the Olympians squeezed in one final turnover before the clock mercifully expired.
Cathedral
will face another unbeaten and higher-ranked opponent Nov. 29 in the 4A state
finals. That would be either second-ranked Lowell or No. 3 Fort Wayne Dwenger,
who are playing in this weekend’s only Saturday semistate.
STAY TUNED FOR STATS
AND MAYBE SOME OTHER STUFF … IF I CAN GET FEELING BACK IN MY HANDS.