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STATE FOOTBALL: Carthage advances to semifinals with win over Lebanon

LEBANON, Mo. — After a two-year absence, the Carthage Tigers are back in the Final Four.

With a strong overall performance, Carthage defeated Lebanon 35-14 on Saturday afternoon in a Class 5 quarterfinal.

The Tigers (11-1) will host Francis Howell (12-0) at 1 p.m. next Saturday in the semifinals. 

Carthage last advanced to the semifinals in 2019, the year the Tigers won the state championship. 

On Saturday, the Tigers held a 14-7 lead at halftime before they pulled away with a 14-0 third quarter.

After the Tigers recovered a Lebanon fumble on the 36-yard line, the visitors scored six plays later on Cooper Jadwin’s 14-yard QB keeper. Chris Mejia’s PAT kick made it 7-0 with 3:24 remaining in the first quarter. 

Lebanon tied the game with 6:01 left in the second quarter after Cade Muscia’s 4-yard touchdown run and the PAT kick by Rhett Rhoades.

Luke Gall’s 37th touchdown of the season, a 4-yard plunge, gave the Tigers a 14-7 lead with 2:06 left in the first half. The score capped a nine play, 62-yard drive.

The Tigers extended their lead early in the third period. 

Gall’s 22-yard touchdown run gave Carthage a 21-7 lead with 9:59 left in the third quarter. The score was set up when Mason Frisinger blocked a Lebanon punt. 

Moments after the Tigers recovered a Lebanon fumble, Clay Kinder’s 15-yard touchdown pass to Hudson Moore gave Carthage a 28-7 lead with 4:08 left in the third quarter.

The Yellowjackets trimmed their deficit to 28-14 early in the fourth quarter on Muscia’s 3-yard touchdown run.

The Tigers took a 35-14 lead when Kinder completed a 22-yard TD strike to Moore on fourth down with 4:02 left. The score all but sealed the win.

Francis Howell beat Timberland 49-18.

The other Class 5 semifinal will feature Cape Girardeau Central vs. Fort Osage. 

The state championship game is scheduled for Dec. 2 in Columbia. 

Offensive explosion helps Carthage overcome Republic’s big plays

REPUBLIC, Mo. — The Republic Tigers scored on plays of 61, 72 and 80 yards in the first half. In the entire game, they had only six other plays go for 10 or more yards. 

At one point, it looked like those long, quick-strike scoring plays were going to keep them alive in a matchup with the Carthage Tigers on Friday night, but the offense of the Tigers wearing blue and white just refused to stop. Carthage eventually turned what looked like a back-and-forth track meet of a game into a 63-29 rout to stay undefeated at 7-0, while Republic dropped to 2-6.

“Really, defensively, it was what we thought it might be,” Carthage coach Jon Guidie said. “We watched them on film and a lot of their big plays come from broken plays where the quarterback is scrambling around, buying time and we lose coverage on the back end and he finds somebody wide open down there. 

“That’s pretty much what happened on some of those big plays they got,” he said. “But other than that, I thought our defense played really solid, really well, it was just a few broken plays.”

The first quarter ended 21-7 in favor of Carthage, and the margin would stay no greater than two scores as the teams traded touchdowns until a 68-yard touchdown run by sophomore running back Luke Gall sparked a run of 35 unanswered points. With 8:14 to play in the first half, the score was 28-14 in favor of Carthage. The Tigers took a 49-21 advantage into halftime. 

On a near flawless night for the Carthage offense, they racked up 598 yards of total offense, with 530 of those coming on the ground. Gall finished with 177 rushing yards on 15 carries, while senior quarterback Patrick Carlton added 18 carries for 224 yards, on top of six-of-eight passing attempts for 68 yards. The pair each accounted for four touchdowns.  

“We kept coming offensively, never really got slowed down, to be honest,” Guidie said. “I thought our offensive line did a tremendous job … All that happens because of those guys up front and the pride they have in themselves is amazing.”

Guidie said he was pleased with this team’s performance, but acknowledged that Republic keeping itself in the game with its big plays — despite Carthage’s successes in all other facets — kept the feel of the game tight. 

“It’s always tense for me,” he said with a slight laugh. “But yeah, you feel like you’re kind of in control of things, I think we went up 21-7 early in the first quarter and then they hit a big play and pulled back within seven. At that point you feel like ‘We’re going to have to outscore these dudes, we’re going to have to score every time we touch the ball.’”

With the exception of the drive in which the clock hit 0:00 in the fourth quarter, that’s exactly what the Tigers did. The effort sets up a showdown with 7-1 Nixa at David Haffner Stadium in Carthage next week in the teams’ regular season finale. 

Gall’s explosive night helps Carthage overcome turnovers, start 1-0

CARTHAGE, Mo. — In their first game since being crowned Class 5 football state champions last December, the Carthage Tigers played like a championship team — if one seeing its first game-speed action in nearly nine months.

A seemingly unstoppable Luke Gall, sophomore running back, helped Carthage (1-0, 1-0 COC) — which did not participate in a traditional preseason jamboree due to recommendations regarding the COVID-19 pandemic — overcome four turnovers, three of which came in the red zone. Gall scored all five of his team’s touchdowns to help Carthage beat the Ozark Tigers (0-1, 0-1 COC) 35-14 at David Haffner Stadium on Friday night. 

“A big part was the offensive line, the holes were giant,” Gall said. “Just (kept) running my feet, just run hard, that’s pretty much it. I was getting pretty gassed, I’m going to start working on my conditioning.”

He could be forgiven for some fatigue: In just his second varsity start, Gall racked up 259 rushing yards — including an 84-yard dash to the end zone — on 19 carries with the five scores. He continued that conditioning work in-game by also playing extensively at linebacker for the Carthage defense.

“Luke played really, really well,” Carthage coach Jon Guidie said. “You know, he’s a 15-year-old kid. Just a sophomore … I thought he had a great night, he had several carries, several big runs and it’s really great to see because he’s a kid that works his butt off throughout the week and in the weight room. For him to come out and have that type of game to start out with, I’m really proud of him.”

Twice, well within striking distance of a touchdown, Ozark recovered a Carthage fumble, denying the Tigers chances at padding their lead. Carthage’s last drive of the first half ended when Patrick Carlton threw an interception in the end zone. The other turnover came on a low snap that eluded Carlton. Even so, Ozark was limited to two scoring drives and Carthage rode Gall to an offensive outburst.

“That’s stuff that you can clean up and fix,” Guidie said. “And good teams will do that. I thought we were really good last year at ball security and we’ll go back and iron that stuff out. That was Gavin (VanGilder)’s first start, too, at center. And the way these guys play, the fronts they gave us and the stunts they gave us, that’s huge for Gavin to navigate through that stuff, so he’ll continue to grow and get better.”

Carthage will follow up its season-opening win next week with a road matchup with the Carl Junction Bulldogs