"I was so down last week, I dropped a couple of passes that could have turned the game around," said Gaels' quarterback Chris Collins, referring to last week's loss at McDonogh. "I don't feel like we should have lost that game, but then again, any team can be beaten. I think we showed that tonight. Now we're right back in it." |
| Mount St. Joseph senior quarterback Chris Collins knelt down in somber disbelief on the McDonogh football field last Saturday after losing a mistake-filled game by a seven point margin to the defending MIAA A Conference tri-champions. The way Collins sees it, the game, played on a sunny afternoon, literally had slipped from the Gaels' grasp. "I was so down last week, I dropped a couple of passes that could have turned the game around," said Collins, who plays a variety of positions for the Gaels, including receiver and running back. "I don't feel like we should have lost that game, but then again, any team can be beaten," Collins said. "I think we showed that tonight." Collins spoke while standing in a downpour on Johns' Hopkins University's astro turf field after engineering Friday night's 24-7 rout of previously unbeaten A Conference tri-champion Loyola (6-1, 1-1) in the inaugural DigitalSports Primtime Pigskin High School Football Series. Collins staked the Gaels (3-4 overall, 2-1 league) to a 14-0 lead by throwing a 30-yard scoring pass to Kevin Fitzpatrick and rushing, untouched, for an 18-yard touchdown, helping to bring to an end a 10-game winning streak by a team which defeated Mount St. Joseph in the final seconds last season. "We had some bad games, dropping balls, blowing leads like we did against Thomas Johnson, which was also played in the rain," said Collins, a fleet-footed, 5-foot-11, 155-pounder. "But tonight, I think the rain favored us, with our ball-controll," Collins said. "They like to run shot-gun, don't like to go under the center. But with this nice turf, we can cut real good. I think it helped us out a lot."
Loyola's only score came with 4:53 left in the first half, when they were within, 14-7, after junior quarterback Leon Kinnard, ran for a 12-yard touchdown to finish off a 13-play, 80-yard drive. But the Gales responded with Lowe's field goal with 9.7 seconds left in the half, going up, 17-7, at the intermission. "I thought we came out ready to go and defeated them really in all phases of the game. Hats off to our kids, they just played a great game all around," said third-year coach Chip Armstrong, crediting his linebacking corps of J.T. Ervin, Kirk Brooks, Tom Conley and Leroy Bradford. "There was a time where I thought we were getting gassed, and they were running ball effectively since they were pretty big up front." The Gaels, earlier, 40-3 winners over league-rival Georgetown Prep of Bethesda, also have lost, 15-14, to Landon, a team both the Dons and McDonogh had routed by large margins.
The Gaels, meanwhile, gained 214 yards of their 262 total offensive yards on the ground, mostly behind Renard Robinson (65yards), Collins (63), Rod White (55) and Nick Hutcherson. Collins credited the blocking of Conley, Serio, Willertz, Tyrell Fridie, Kirk Brooks, John Evans and Jay Drenner. "I don't know what I'm going to do for those guys, but my offensive line did an excellent job," said Collins. "We just came to play, and we were focused on playing right. We look at McDonogh as being an upset, but we bounced back with another MIAA A Conference win. And now, we're right back in the race. We can tie for first place in the league." Mount St. Joseph 24, Loyola 7 Loyola 0 7 0 0 7 Mount St. Joseph 7 10 0 7 24 1st MSJ-Fitzpatrick 30 pass from Collins (Lowe kick) 2nd MSJ-Collins 18 run (Lowe kick) LOY-Kinnard 12 run (Timmons kick) MSJ-Lowe 21 FG 4th MSJ-Hall-Bennett 1 run (Lowe kick) |
