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FOOTBALL: Joplin area players named all-state by Missouri Football Coaches Association

The Joplin area was well-represented on the Missouri Football Coaches Association’s all-state teams for 2023. 

In Class 6, Joplin senior running back Quin Renfro was a first team all-state selection.

Also for Curtis Jasper’s Eagles, senior tight end Whit Hafer, senior offensive linemen Dontrell Holt and senior linebacker Jonathan Williams were second team selections.

Webb City and Carthage had multiple players selected in Class 5.

Webb City senior offensive lineman Shaun Hunt was listed on the Class 5 first team. 

Second team picks were Carthage senior offensive lineman Edward Carreto and Webb City senior linebacker Christian Brock.

Listed on the third team were Carthage juniors Landyn Collins (RB), Karson Murray (WR/TE) and Langston Morgan (DB) and Webb City senior defensive lineman Tucker Liberatore and junior defensive back Andrew Young.

In Class 4, Carl Junction senior linebacker Johnny Starks and Nevada senior offensive lineman Talan Chandler were first team selections.

Also for Nevada, junior running back Jack Cheaney and senior linebacker Henry Campbell were listed on the second team. 

Also selected second team all-state in Class 4 were McDonald County seniors Toby Moore (OL), Jayce Hitt (DL) and Josh Pacheco (DB).  

State runner-up Seneca had eight players selected to the Class 3 all-state team.

First team picks for the Indians were senior running back Jackson Marrs, senior offensive lineman Brian Bigbee, senior linebacker Morgan Vaughn and senior defensive back Blake Hurn. 

Seneca senior Gavyn Hoover (athlete) was a second team pick, while senior Ethan Altic (WR), sophomore Jace Renfro (OL) and junior Nolan Napier (DE) were third team selections.

Mount Vernon junior running back Braden Dodson and Aurora senior linebacker Jose Ibarra were listed on the third team.

Class 2 state champion Lamar had 10 players selected.

On the first team offense were seniors Chase Querry (WR), Ian Ngugi (athlete), Aiden Loveall (OL) and Ayden Forst (OL). 

On the first team defense were seniors Rourke Dillon (DL) , Trace Wooldridge (DE) and Khiler Nance (LB) and juniors Alex Wilkerson (DB) and Mario Delapena (DL). Nance was named the Class 2 Defensive Player of the Year.

Ngugi was a second team pick as a kick returner and senior running back Logan Kish was a third team selection.

Lamar’s Jared Beshore was the Class 2 Coach of the Year. 

Sarcoxie senior punter Garrett Smith was a first team all-state pick in Class 2.

In the 8-man division, Lockwood junior running back Nik Thieman was a first team pick and teammates Miles Neely (OL) and Hank Eggerman (LB) were listed on the second team. 

Liberal had two players selected to the third team, senior wide receiver Quincy Bazal and senior linebacker Brodie Wilson.

 

FULL ALL-STATE TEAMS: 

Missouri Football Coaches Association – ALL-STATE (wildapricot.org)

STATE FOOTBALL: Lamar overcomes 21-point deficit to beat Valle Catholic in title game

 

COLUMBIA, Mo. — Lamar overcame a three-score deficit and scored the go-ahead touchdown in overtime to knock off Valle Catholic 35-28 on Saturday night in the MSHSAA Class 2 Show-Me Bowl on Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium.

It’s Lamar’s ninth state football championship and second under the direction of Jared Beshore.

In a clash between state powerhouses, the title game was deadlocked at 28 at the end of regulation. 

In overtime, Lamar needed just one play to score, as junior Alex Wilkerson ran for a 25-yard touchdown. 

The Lamar defense held the Warriors out of the end zone on the ensuing drive to secure the victory. 

It was a remarkable comeback for the Tigers, as Valle Catholic scored the game’s first 21 points.

Overall, Lamar scored 35 of the game’s final 42 points, as the Warriors were limited to one touchdown in the second half.

Valle Catholic’s Rylan Fallert hauled in a 37-yard touchdown pass from Grant Fallert at the 10:45 mark of the first period to give the Warriors an early 7-0 advantage.

After Lamar’s first drive ended with a turnover on downs, Valle Catholic extended its lead to 14-0 after a 4-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Gegg that came with 3:01 left in the opening period.

The Tigers had a promising drive going early in the second quarter, but it resulted in a turnover on downs.

Valle Catholic went up 21-0 after Gegg’s second touchdown reception of the game, this time on a 75-yard pass from Grant Fallert. 

Lamar got on the board when Wilkerson connected with Chase Querry on a 69-yard touchdown strike with 6:18 left in the first half. 

After a defensive stop by the Tigers’ defense, Logan Kish finished off the ensuing drive with a 2-yard run with 2:01 left in the second quarter, trimming Lamar’s deficit to 21-14. 

Valle Catholic took a 28-14 advantage with 6:30 left in the third quarter on a 37-yard touchdown pass to Colin Henderson. 

Next, Lamar was stopped on fourth down, resulting in another turnover on downs.

But a botched Valle Catholic punt gave the Tigers great field position, with Lamar taking over on the 4. Two plays later, Lamar’s Wilkerson scored on a 3-yard plunge, cutting Catholic’s lead to 28-21 with 10:18 left.

After a defensive stop, Lamar tied the game at 28 with 6:11 remaining in regulation after a 91-yard touchdown pass from Wilkerson to Querry, along with the PAT kick by Jose Juarez.

Both teams had opportunities late in regulation, but neither team was able to score and the game went into overtime. 

Lamar (13-1) recorded 474 yards of total offense, with 257 rushing and 217 passing.

Wilkerson ran 23 times for 135 yards and also passed for 217 yards on eight completions.

Valle Catholic (12-2) finished with 376 yards, 264 passing and 112 rushing.

The Tigers were in the championship game for the fourth straight season, finishing second in both ’22 and ’21 after winning the title in ’20. 

 

 

FULL STATS: MSHSAA 11-Man Football: Valle Catholic vs. Lamar – 12/2/2023

FOOTBALL: All-COC team released; Joplin’s Renfro is Offensive Player of the Year

The 2023 All-Central Ozark Conference Football Team is listed below.

The Offensive Player of the Year is Joplin senior running back Quin Renfro.

The Defensive Player of the Year is Nixa senior defensive back Spencer Ward.

The COC’s Coach of the Year is Nixa’s John Perry.

CLICK HERE FOR PDF: 2023 COC Football (Updated)

 

 

 

 

PHOTO GALLERY: Webb City suffers semifinal loss to Republic

Webb City’s football team suffered a 21-20 loss to Republic in the Class 5 semifinals on Saturday afternoon.

The setback ended Webb City’s season, while Republic advanced to the state title game for the first time in school history. 

Below are photos from Saturday’s game by Steve Rackley (flattopphotos.com).

 

 

 

All photos by Steve Rackley (flattopphotos.com).

STATE FOOTBALL: Missed opportunities doom Webb City in semifinal loss to Republic

 

REPUBLIC, Mo. — A late turnover doomed a potential game-winning drive, and the Webb City Cardinals saw the 2023 season end in heartbreaking fashion.

Republic made more winning plays late in the game and the Tigers defeated Webb City 21-20 in a Class 5 semifinal on Saturday afternoon at Tiger Stadium.

The Tigers will play for a state football championship for the first time in school history. 

Republic (12-2) will meet Cardinal Ritter (13-0) in the state championship game at 7 p.m. on Friday at Faurot Field in Columbia.

In Ryan McFarland’s first season at the helm, Webb City concludes the ’23 campaign with a record of 10-3. 

The Cardinals won the regular season matchup with the Tigers in convincing fashion, 42-21, at Cardinal Stadium. But the stakes were much higher in the rematch between Central Ozark Conference foes.

Republic’s opening series ate up nearly 11 minutes of the first quarter and a 19-play scoring drive was capped by a 1-yard touchdown run by senior quarterback Wyatt Woods.

Omari Jackson picks up a big gain on the ground against Republic on Saturday in a Class 5 semifinal. Photo by Steve Rackley/Special to SoMo Sports.

Webb City responded immediately, as the Cardinals scored on their first play from scrimmage when sophomore quarterback Gabe Johnson connected with junior Jackson Lucas on a 45-yard touchdown strike. However, the PAT kick was off the mark, keeping the Tigers in front 7-6.

The Cardinals took a 12-7 lead with 7:17 remaining in the second quarter on senior running back Omari Jackson’s 4-yard touchdown plunge. In another missed opportunity, the 2-point conversion failed.

The Tigers went up 14-12 after Woods completed a 63-yard touchdown pass to senior James Rexroat with 4:27 left in the first half, and Mason Cole converted his second PAT kick.

Webb City had another missed opportunity late in the first half, as a penalty cost the visitors a first down on a potential go-ahead drive that ultimately ended with a punt.

After the break, Webb City needed just four plays to go back in front, as the speedy Johnson sprinted past the Republic defense for a 43-yard touchdown on a QB keeper. Johnson ran in the 2-point conversion, giving the Cardinals a 20-14 lead at the 10:27 mark of the third quarter. 

But Republic took a 21-20 lead into the fourth quarter after Woods passed to Caide White for a 9-yard touchdown on the final play of the third period.

Next, the Tigers recovered the ensuing onside kick at the start of the final frame. 

A few plays later, though, Webb City’s Aaron Bell fell on a Republic fumble. But the visitors were unable to take advantage of the takeaway.

Webb City was driving late in the game, but an interception by Republic’s Kaleb Norman on the 17-yard line with just 2:45 remaining sealed the win for the Tigers, who were able to run out the clock after the takeaway.

Webb City quarterback Gabe Johnson tosses to Omari Jackson while Slade Hurd looks on.

NAMES & NUMBERS

Sophomore QB Gabe Johnson carries the ball against Republic on Saturday.

Webb City recorded 281 yards of total offense on 33 plays, with 202 rushing yards and 79 passing yards.

Johnson rushed for 159 yards on 15 carries. He completed 2 of 5 passes for 79 yards.

The Cardinals recorded 12 first downs to Republic’s 17. 

In the semifinals for the first time since 1986, Republic compiled 285 yards on 57 plays, with 195 on the ground and 90 through the air.

Woods ran 26 times for 130 yards and also completed 4 of 7 passes for 90 yards and two scores.

The Tigers had nearly 32 minutes of time of possession to Webb City’s 16.

Webb City had five penalties to Republic’s two.

 

ON THE ROAD AGAIN

It was Webb City’s first road semifinal since 2015, when the Cardinals traveled to Cape Central. 

The program’s last five semifinal matchups were all at Cardinal Stadium, as Webb City hosted Jackson in 2021, Platte County in ’20, Ladue in ’19 and ’18 and Platte County in ’17.

Saturday was Webb City’s 28th semifinal appearance overall.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

RELATED: PHOTO GALLERY: Webb City suffers semifinal loss to Republic – SoMo Sports (somo-sports.com)

 

The Webb City defense converges on Republic QB Wyatt Woods during Saturday’s Class 5 semifinal at Tiger Stadium. Republic defeated Webb City 21-20. All photos by Steve Rackley/Special to SoMo Sports.

 

Webb City’s Slade Hurd attempts to avoid Republic’s Kendall Curbow during Saturday’s Class 5 semifinal at Republic High School.

Webb City’s Aaron Bell and Christian Brock look to make a tackle against Republic on Saturday. Also pictured is Andrew Young (6). All photos by Steve Rackley (flattopphotos.com).

STATE FOOTBALL: Lamar dominates second half, advances to semifinals for 4th straight season

 

LAMAR, Mo. — For the fourth straight year, the Lamar Tigers have advanced to the state semifinals.

Propelled by a dominant second half, Lamar defeated Lafayette County 41-7 in a Class 2 quarterfinal on Saturday afternoon at Thomas M. O’Sullivan Stadium.

The Tigers (11-1) will host Bowling Green (13-0) in next Saturday’s semifinals, with kickoff scheduled for 1 p.m. 

Up 13-7 at halftime, the Tigers outscored the Huskers 28-0 after intermission.

Lafayette County entered the game averaging 50 points per game and the Tigers held the Huskers to seven.

Lamar struck first, as junior Alex Wilkerson scored on a 21-yard QB keeper with 1:36 left in the first quarter. The score, which was set up by a 28-yard gain by Chase Querry, capped a 70-yard drive.

Finishing off a long, time-consuming drive, Lafayette County tied it up when Shakor George hauled in a 4-yard touchdown pass from Brock Page with 3:35 left in the second quarter. 

The Tigers retook the lead with 35 seconds left in the first half on Cooper Haun’s 11-yard touchdown run. The PAT kick was no good, however, and Lamar led 13-7 at halftime.

The final touchdown of the first half was set up when Wilkerson completed a 19-yard pass to Logan Kish with his team facing fourth down and six. 

A wide open Querry hauled in a 28-yard touchdown reception at the 9:48 mark of the third quarter. Haun ran in for the 2-point conversion, giving Lamar a 21-7 advantage. 

After a defensive stop, Wilkerson connected with Haun on a 20-yard touchdown pass with 6:45 left in the third period for a 28-7 cushion.

A 42-yard touchdown sprint by Haun, along with the PAT kick by Jose Juarez, gave Lamar a comfortable 35-7 lead with 3:30 remaining in the third quarter.

The Tigers added a score with 6:18 left on a 24-yard reception by Ian Ngugi. 

Lamar rushed for 324 yards and passed for 91 for 415 yards of total offense.

The Huskers were limited to 141 yards of total offense (71 rushing and 70 passing). The Tigers limited the Huskers to eight rushing yards in the second half. 

The Tigers grabbed a pair of interceptions and also recovered a fumble. 

Lafayette County ends the season with a record of 12-1.

STATE FOOTBALL: Webb City rides strong finish, solid overall effort to quarterfinal victory  

 

WEBB CITY, Mo. — The final home game of the 2023 season was one to remember for the Webb City Cardinals. 

With an impressive overall effort, and riding a strong finish, Webb City upended Grain Valley 49-35 on Friday night in a Class 5 quarterfinal at a packed Cardinal Stadium.

“I’m so proud of our players,” Webb City coach Ryan McFarland said. “They played hard. We’ve talked all week about how this was going to be a game with adversity and a lot of swings. We knew they may get some big plays offensively. We told them the team that keeps fighting adversity and doesn’t give up will have a chance to win. I’m proud of the composure our kids showed on the field tonight.” 

A back and forth affair throughout, the first ever meeting between the schools was deadlocked at 21 in the third quarter before Webb City finished strong, outscoring the Eagles 28-14 the rest of the way.

And as a result, the Cardinals were the team celebrating the season-saving victory on John Roderique Field, where they completed an undefeated home slate. 

“Our seniors were keeping everyone together and the spirits up on the sideline and we never got uptight in the game,” McFarland said. “I think that’s a credit to our leaders.” 

Webb City recovered a fumble, fell on an on-side kick and didn’t commit a turnover in the contest.

“The difference was the mistakes,” Grain Valley coach David Allie said. “They didn’t make them and they got our ball a couple of times. That’s the difference. We had some missed opportunities with the fumble and the on-side kick. They didn’t make mistakes and that shows they’re well-coached.”

“It was a pretty clean game for us,” McFarland said. “That goes back to the senior leadership and the kids playing for each other. We challenged them to do their jobs and play hard. If we can have 11 guys playing hard and not taking a play off, good things can happen. Tonight, that happened for us.”

Also key to the win was the fact the Cardinals were able to record a number of third-down conversions, often through the air. 

“We spent all summer and all season throwing the ball,” McFarland said. “People asked why are we throwing the ball so much. You have to be able to throw the ball when you need to. We feel confident throwing the ball.” 

Webb City (10-2) will travel to conference foe Republic (11-2) next Saturday in the semifinal round of the state tournament. Kickoff is set for 1 p.m.

Webb City is back in the semifinals after a one-year absence. 

“I’m happy for the kids to experience this,” McFarland said as a large group of students and parents celebrated with the team on the field. “Webb City Football…this is why you play. You want a chance to win a state championship. They’re keeping that chance alive.” 

 

GAME RECAP

Facing a second down and 21 deep on the 10, Webb City sophomore quarterback Gabe Johnson sprinted past the defense for a scintillating 90-yard touchdown run on the game’s opening drive, electrifying the home crowd and giving the Cardinals an early lead.

But Grain Valley needed just five plays to tie it up, as standout senior running back Ty Williams ran for a 46-yard touchdown run with 8:55 remaining in the first quarter.

The Eagles took a 14-7 lead with 4:21 left in the opening frame on senior quarterback Sal Caldarella’s 17-yard touchdown pass to classmate Noah Olah.

Webb City senior running back Omari Jackson broke free for a 60-yard touchdown run with 1:29 left in the first period, and Alex Dunne’s PAT kick tied the score at 14-all.

It looked like the Eagles were about to re-take the lead with just under five minutes left in the first half, but the visitors lost a fumble near the end zone, with Webb City’s Conner Gayman knocking the ball loose and Jordan Howard recovering for a touchback.

The Cardinals took a 21-14 lead with 2:07 remaining in the second quarter when junior Joseph Graffenreid hauled in a 23-yard touchdown pass from Johnson on fourth and 19. The go-ahead score finished off a 10-play, 80-yard drive.

Grain Valley’s Aaron Barr caught a 43-yard touchdown pass from Caldarella at the 9:39 mark of the third period, tying the game at 21-21.

But Webb City responded with a pair of crucial touchdowns to take a two-score lead, as sophomore Slade Hurd scored on an 8-yard run and Johnson ripped off an electric 78-yard touchdown sprint.

“The long run by Gabe was a quarterback misdirection play,” McFarland said. “We were waiting for them to over-pursue and we thought that was a good time to call it. It worked out well for us.”

Grain Valley pulled within seven at 35-28 with a touchdown at the end of the third quarter.

Webb City recovered an on-side kick to start the final frame and then took a 42-28 advantage after Jackson’s 1-yard touchdown plunge with 9:58 remaining. 

The Eagles answered with a 71-yard scoring drive, once again pulling within a single TD with just under seven minutes left.

But the Cardinals wouldn’t be denied. 

Webb City picked up a huge first down with a third down conversion, once again through the air. This time, Johnson completed a 32-yard pass to senior receiver Payton Marshall, extending the time-consuming drive.

“We didn’t get off the field on third down,” Allie said. “That kills you.”

A few plays later, Webb City put the game away when Hurd charged into the end zone from a yard out, making it 49-35 with just 57 seconds left.

“We have played well in the fourth quarter all year,” McFarland noted. “We’ve had a lot of close games where we’ve been able to pull away in the fourth quarter. The credit goes to the mentality of our kids.” 

Grain Valley threatened to score in the final seconds, but Webb City’s defense forced a turnover on downs for the final exclamation point on the victory. 

“Our kids fought hard the whole time and we never felt like we were out of it,” Allie noted. “We ran out of time.” 

 

NAMES & NUMBERS

Simply put, the Eagles struggled to slow down Webb City’s split-back veer rushing attack.

Webb City compiled 567 yards on 62 plays, with 447 rushing yards and 120 passing yards.  

The speedy Johnson ran for 255 yards on 16 carries, while Jackson added 121 rushing yards on 13 carries. Hurd contributed 54 yards on the ground. Johnson, Jackson and Hurd scored two touchdowns apiece.

“Their offense can control the ball and keep it out of our hands,” Allie said. “Their quarterback is shifty and they run the ball hard.”

Brody Eggleston was credited with 12 tackles and Gayman had seven.

Grain Valley recorded 476 yards on 51 plays, with 282 passing and 194 rushing.

Williams ran for 163 yards on 21 carries with one touchdown. He finished the season with 33 touchdowns and more than 2,400 rushing yards. 

Caldarella completed 15 of 25 passes for 282 yards.

Grain Valley ends the season at 10-2. The Eagles, who had won eight straight games ahead of Friday’s clash, lost in the quarterfinals for the fifth straight season.  

 

THIS ‘N THAT

Webb City went 7-0 at home this season. 

Webb City last advanced to the semifinals in 2021. Of course, the Cardinals captured a state championship that year, their first in Class 5.

Webb City was in the quarterfinals for the 31st time in school history. 

 

CLASS 5 QUARTERFINAL

WEBB CITY 49, GRAIN VALLEY 35

Grain Valley     14      0     14      7   — 35

Webb City         14     7     14     14  — 49

SCORING SUMMARY

WC: Gabe Johnson 90 run (Alex Dunne kick)

GV:  Ty Williams 46 run (Ben Drinkwater kick)

GV: Noah Olah 17 pass from Sal Caldarella (Drinkwater kick)

WC: Omari Jackson 60 run (Dunne kick)

WC: Joseph DeGraffenreid 23 pass from Johnson (Dunne kick)

GV: Aaron Barr 43 pass from Caldarella (Drinkwater kick)

WC: Slade Hurd 8 run (Dunne kick)

WC: Johnson 78 run (Dunne kick)

GV: Peyton Woodrome 18 pass from Cardarella (Drinkwater kick)

WC: Omari Jackson 1 run (Dunne kick)

GV: Woodrome 24 pass from Cardarella (Drinkwater kick)

WC: Hurd 1 run (Dunne kick)

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

FOOTBALL ROUNDUP: McDonald County, Lamar capture district titles

 

MCDONALD COUNTY 40, BOLIVAR 21

The McDonald County Mustangs captured the program’s first district championship by beating Bolivar 40-21 in the Class 4 District 6 title game on Friday at SBU.

The Mustangs led 14-7 at halftime and 27-21 at the end of the third period.

Destyn Dowd scored four touchdowns for the Mustangs, while Josh Pacheco and Sam Barton contributed one touchdown apiece.

McDonald County (8-4) will host Jefferson City (8-4) in the Class 4 quarterfinals on Saturday.

 

LAMAR 35, ADRIAN 18

Lamar won the Class 2 District 5 title on Friday.

Adrian held an 18-14 lead at the end of the third quarter before the Tigers scored 21 unanswered points in the final frame.

Lamar (10-1) hosts Lafayette County (12-0) in the quarterfinals at 1 p.m. on Saturday.

The Big 8 West captured four district titles on Friday, as Seneca, Lamar, Nevada and Mac County all won their respective title games.

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Webb City advances to quarterfinals with dominant victory over rival Carthage

 

WEBB CITY, Mo. — After a dominant victory over a longtime rival, the Webb City Cardinals are headed back to the state quarterfinals.

Top-seeded Webb City rolled from the start on the way to a convincing 42-7 win over third-seeded Carthage on Friday night in the championship game of the Class 5 District 7 tournament at Cardinal Stadium. 

“Tonight we wanted to come out and set the tone early and I think we were able to do that,” Webb City coach Ryan McFarland said. “Our 33 seniors have led us in every practice and workout and they led us tonight. I can’t say enough about the senior class. We’re going to get back to work on Monday. The Carthage game is over and it’s time to move on to whoever we play next.”

Webb City (9-2) will host Grain Valley (10-1) at 7 p.m. on Friday in the quarterfinal round of the state tourney.

In a first half where nearly everything went the host’s way, Webb City built a commanding 27-0 lead by intermission. It was more of the same in the second half, as the Cardinals held a 42-0 advantage late in the game. 

“We kind of got steamrolled tonight for sure,” Carthage coach Jon Guidie said. “Big credit goes out to Webb City. They played a heck of a game. Their kids played hard. They took it to us tonight.” 

Of course, the Cardinals had some extra motivation after falling to the Tigers 20-13 during the regular season meeting on Oct. 6. 

“When we played them last time, for whatever reason, they were more physical than us,” McFarland said. “They played with more energy than we did that night. We’ve talked about that since that game…we can control our energy level and how physical we are.” 

Webb City senior defensive lineman Jace Jones admitted his team was highly-motivated to avenge the loss to the Tigers. 

“We had great preparation in practice this week,” the 6-foot-7, 255-pound Jones said. “We took practice more seriously this time. We knew the season was on the line. I’m so proud of every one of my teammates. We put in the work, effort and preparation and good things happened for us tonight. Overall, our offense and defense played complementary football. The offense would score, and the defense would get a stop. It was a great night.” 

Webb City’s Andrew Elwell is tackled by Landon Bland during Friday’s district title game at Cardinal Stadium. Photo by Israel Perez.

GAME RECAP

After the teams traded interceptions early in the game, Webb City senior running back Omari Jackson scampered into the end zone from six yards out, finishing off a 12-play, 95-yard drive. 

It was the lone score of the first quarter.

The Webb City defense forced a turnover on downs on the first series of the second quarter, setting up the offense with good field position.

The hosts needed just two plays to go 44 yards, as Jackson’s 37-yard touchdown run gave the Cardinals a 13-0 lead with 9:36 remaining in the first half.

After Carthage went three and out, Webb City junior running back Andrew Elwell recorded a 2-yard touchdown run with just under five minutes left in the second period for a 20-0 cushion.

Next, speedy sophomore quarterback Gabe Johnson sprinted past the CHS defense for a 76-yard touchdown run, extending his team’s advantage to 27-0.

“We had some big plays called back due to penalties in the first half, but I think it gave our kids confidence that we have that big play potential,” McFarland said. “We just needed to cut down on our mistakes.” 

Everything continued to go Webb City’s way, as an interception by junior defensive back Andrew Young late in the first half halted a Carthage drive.

After throwing a pair of interceptions in the opening half, Carthage lost a fumble at the start of the third quarter.

The Cardinals added a pair of unanswered touchdowns in the third quarter, as Elwell scored on a 4-yard run and senior quarterback Braden McKee contributed a 6-yard score for a lopsided 42-0 advantage.

Carthage junior quarterback Brady Carlton scored on a 2-yard run with 35 seconds left for the final margin.

 

NAMES & NUMBERS

Led by stellar offensive line play, Webb City recorded 480 yards of offense on 45 plays, with 418 rushing and 62 passing.

Elwell ran 14 times for 126 yards and two scores, while Johnson had 119 rushing yards on just six carries. Jackson ran nine times for 91 yards and two touchdowns.

“Gabe Johnson is a stud,” McFarland said. “He’s getting better and better each week. We got Omari Jackson back last week and he’s a big play guy for us. All of our running backs played really well.” 

The Cardinals recorded 15 first downs to Carthage’s five.

Webb City’s stout defense limited Carthage to 158 yards on 38 plays, 127 on the ground and 31 through the air. 

Carlton recorded 60 rushing yards on 16 carries and Landyn Collins had 42 yards on 11 attempts.

Webb City remained undefeated at home this season, as the Cardinals are now 6-0 on John Roderique Field.

It was the third time in four years the two close rivals met with the season on the line in a district title game. 

Webb City sophomore Slade Hurd carries the ball during Friday’s Class 5 District 7 championship game at Cardinal Stadium. Photo by Israel Perez.

SAYING GOODBYE

Carthage ends the ’23 season with a record of 7-5.

Carthage said goodbye to 10 seniors. The Tigers will return a solid core next fall, as many underclassmen were in big roles this season. 

The Tigers started the fall 0-3 before turning things around and winning seven of eight contests ahead of the district title game.

“I’m very happy with the progress our kids made this year,” Guidie said. “It was a tough situation coming in after losing 11 starters on defense. It took us some time to adjust, but they did. Our kids came around. And that’s a senior class that went 0-9 as freshmen. For those guys to hang in there, and win seven games after a 0-3 start, I’m really proud of those guys.” 

 

DISTRICT TITLE IN YEAR 1 FOR MCFARLAND

The Cardinals captured a district title in Coach McFarland’s first year as the storied program’s head coach, advancing to the quarterfinals for the first time since winning a state title in 2021. 

A Webb City graduate and former assistant, McFarland noted it was a special occasion to see his team celebrating on Friday night. 

“It’s not about me, it’s about the kids,” McFarland said. “When they buy in and do what you ask them to do, day in and day out, you want them to reap the benefits of doing that. That’s probably the biggest part of this. The kids have done everything I’ve asked, so I hope everything works out well for them.” 

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 7 TITLE GAME

WEBB CITY 42, CARTHAGE 7

Carthage       0      0       0      7   —  7

Webb City    7     20     15     0   — 42

SCORING SUMMARY

WC: Omari Jackson 6 run (Alex Dunne kick)

WC: Jackson 37 run (Kick failed)

WC: Andrew Elwell 2 run (Dunne kick)

WC: Gabe Johnson 76 run (Dunne kick)

WC: Elwell 4 run (Elwell run)

WC: Braden McKee 6 run (Dunne kick)

CAR: Brady Carlton 2 run (Luis Fuentes kick).

 

RECENT DISTRICT TITLE GAMES

2023: Webb City def. Carthage 42-7

2022: Carthage def. Republic 28-14

2021: Webb City def. Carthage 28-21

2020: Webb City def. Carthage 42-21

 

Webb City sophomore Gabe Johnson is tackled by Carthage’s Trevor Meadows.

 

Carthage junior QB Brady Carlton is tackled by Webb City’s Andrew Young during Friday’s district title game at Cardinal Stadium.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Carthage brushes off Raytown South to create rematch with Webb City

 

RAYTOWN, Mo. — Only two points separated Carthage and Raytown South in the district standings before Friday night.

So the Tigers made sure that the point separation on the gridiron was a much different story.

Third-seeded Carthage erased an early two-score deficit and dominated the second half — including a 28-point fourth quarter — to earn a 56-28 road victory over No. 2 Raytown South in the Class 5 District 7 semifinal round.

Junior running back Landyn Collins carried the load for the Tigers, starring with a five-touchdown performance.

The Cardinals (8-3) even made it a one-score game at 28-21 midway through the third quarter before Carthage (7-4) blew the doors off the home side the rest of the way.

The Tigers, leading by the same seven-point lead after three quarters, finished the contest with a 28-7 margin to propel Carthage into an intriguing district title game at Webb City next Friday.

The Tigers didn’t hold a lead until the 18-second mark of the second quarter. In fact, Raytown South raced out to a 14-0 lead, with the second score coming after a surprising onside kick that the home side recovered.

The Cardinals scored on their first two drives—both coming through the air with Sheldon Locke linking up with Iowa State commit Marcus Neal on 51- and 11-yard touchdown completions. Those were two of Neal’s four receiving touchdowns on the day, proving his status as a three-star and DI recruit who plays both ways.

Carthage chipped away offensively and leaned on a stout defense to change the guard in this district semifinal matchup. Tigers junior quarterback Brady Carlton scored on an 11-yard scamper in the first quarter and Collins tallied his first rushing touchdown to make it 14-all with 43 seconds left before the break.

The Tigers managed to get into the end zone once more before visiting the guest locker room after recovering a fumble on the ensuing kickoff and Collins rushing for a 7-yard score and a 21-14 halftime lead with 18 seconds left.

Collins continued his momentum with a short touchdown run on Carthage’s first series of the second half, providing a two-score lead at the time. But Neal made a toe-tapping 8-yard reception for his third score on the night, cutting the Tigers’ lead to 28-21 with less than five minutes remaining in the third.

Then, Carthage went into overdrive. Carlton connected with junior receiver Langston Morgan on a 23-yard touchdown before the Tigers recovered their own onside kick, and Collins ran one in from four yards out for a 42-21 lead midway through the fourth.

Neal then proved he wasn’t quite finished, bringing in a 65-yard reception on the near sideline to trim the lead to 42-28 with 7:10 left. But Collins had an answer with a three-yard touchdown run before Morgan recorded a 36-yard pick-6 to put the game out of reach with 2:01 remaining.

Carthage, which started the season 0-3, will play for a district championship next Friday at top-seeded Webb City (8-2). The Tigers handed Webb City one of its two losses 20-13 on Oct. 6 in Carthage.

 

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Friday’s semifinal scores; title games set

 

 

CLASS 6 DISTRICT 5

Semifinals

(1) Nixa 50, (5) Ozark 0

(3) Joplin 45, (2) Kickapoo 29

 

Title game (Nov. 10)

Joplin at Nixa, 7 p.m.

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 7

Semifinals

(1) Webb City 71, (4) Belton 20

(3) Carthage 56, (2) Raytown South 28

 

Title game (Nov. 10)

Carthage at Webb City, 7 p.m.

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 7

Semifinals

(1) Nevada 43, (4) Grandview 0

(3) Carl Junction 17, (2) Harrisonville 7

 

Title game (Nov. 10)

Carl Junction at Nevada, 7 p.m.

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 6

Semifinals

(1) Bolivar 53, (5) Hillcrest 14

(3) McDonald County 35, (2) West Plains 33

 

Title game (Nov. 10)

McDonald County at Bolivar, 7 p.m.

 

CLASS 3 DISTRICT 6

Semifinals

(1) Seneca 48, (4) Cassville 0

(2) Mount Vernon 45, (3) Reeds Spring 13

 

Title game (Nov. 10)

Mount Vernon at Seneca, 7 p.m.

 

CLASS 2 DISTRICT 5

Semifinals

(1) Lamar 47, (5) Diamond 0

(2) Adrian 49, (3) Butler 14

 

Title game (Nov. 10)

Adrian at Lamar, 7 p.m.

 

8-MAN DISTRICT 1

Semifinals

(1) Lockwood 62, (4) Greenfield 12

(3) Liberal 44, (2) College Heights 28

 

Title game (Nov. 10)

Liberal at Lockwood, 7 p.m.

 

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Webb City routs Belton, advances to title game

 

WEBB CITY, Mo. — The Webb City Cardinals showed no signs of rust after a bye week. 

In an explosive start, top-seeded Webb City scored on its first four offensive plays in dramatic fashion en route to a dominating 71-20 win over fourth-seeded Belton on Friday night in the Class 5 District 7 semifinals at Cardinal Stadium.

“We had a great week of practice last week and it carried over to this week,” Webb City coach Ryan McFarland said. “We wanted to clean some things up in the bye week and I think we proved we did that tonight. We’ve really been emphasizing getting off to a fast start. All year it seemed like we went into halftime struggling a little bit before playing better in the second half. Playing better in the first half was a priority and I think we accomplished that tonight.” 

Webb City (8-2) will host third-seeded Carthage (7-4) in the district title game next Friday night. 

“It should be a great environment and it will be a big test for us,” McFarland said. “Who else would you want to play to try and win a district championship?”

Playing in front of a large home crowd on John Roderique Field, Webb City built a commanding 64-7 lead by halftime in the program’s first-ever meeting with Belton.

The Cardinals scored 37 unanswered points to start the night.

“We were doing things right and the offensive line played really well,” McFarland said of the fast start. “That group has played well all year. And at this time of the year, you like to see the guys doing the things they’ve been coached to do.”

Webb City’s Jonah Spieker (81) sprints ahead of the Belton defense on his way to a 56-yard touchdown. Webb City rolled to a 71-20 win over Belton at Cardinal Stadium. Photo by Tyler Wade.

GAME RECAP

On his team’s first offensive snap of the night, Webb City sophomore quarterback Gabe Johnson sprinted 80 yards to the end zone.

After Belton’s second punt of the night, the Cardinals once again needed just one play to score. Johnson ran 54 yards on the first play from scrimmage for the touchdown, giving Webb City an early 14-0 advantage with 6:16 remaining in the first quarter.

The Cardinals made it three touchdowns on three plays when senior running back Omari Jackson, in his first action since Week 3, sprinted 35 yards to give the hosts a 21-0 lead with 3:23 left in the opening frame.

A bad snap resulted in a safety and gave the Cardinals a 23-0 advantage.

Next, Braden McKee completed a 78-yard touchdown pass to Drew Vonder Haar on the fourth offensive play of the night for a commanding 30-0 cushion.

“That’s the kids believing in our system and just doing their jobs,” McFarland said of scoring four times on four plays. “We got a lot of people involved. We keep telling the guys to prepare themselves and make the most of their opportunities. They were able to do that tonight.” 

Jackson’s 21-yard touchdown run made it 37-0 early in the second quarter before Belton got on the board on Tyrion Thomas’ 84-yard kick return. 

A 56-yard touchdown pass to Jonah Spieker, an 8-yard run by Andrew Elwell, Andrew Young’s 84-yard pick six and Slade Hurd’s 98-yard run made it 64-7 at the break.

After intermission, Jackson Lucas ran for a 95-yard touchdown run to give the Cardinals a whopping 71-7 lead.

Belton scored twice in the fourth quarter against Webb City’s deep reserves for the final margin.

Belton’s Tyrion Thomas (11) tries to get past the Webb City defense on Friday night at Cardinal Stadium. Photo by Tyler Wade.

NAMES & NUMBERS

Webb City recorded 578 yards on just 29 plays. The Cardinals ran for 444 yards on 27 attempts and passed for 134 yards on two completions. 

Webb City only had possession for 15 minutes, 16 seconds, while Belton had a time of possession of 32:44.

Johnson ran twice for 133 yards and two scores. Alex Dunne converted 9-of-10 PAT kicks. 

The 71 points is believed to have tied the school record. Webb City also scored 71 points on Oct. 24 of 2014 against McDonald County (71-0). The Cardinals scored 70 against Nevada in 2004. Those are believed to be the only two times the Cardinals have reached 70 points.

Belton (6-5) compiled 235 yards on 62 plays, with 156 rushing and 79 passing.

The Webb City defense recorded four interceptions. 

“Belton has a talented quarterback and we were able to get pressure on him with our D-line,” McFarland said. “We were able to drop our linebackers. It was a great job by our defensive coordinators and our defensive players for sure.” 

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Webb City will host longtime rival Carthage with the district championship on the line next Friday at 7 p.m.

Carthage knocked off second-seeded Raytown South 56-28 in the other semifinal. 

Of course, Carthage defeated Webb City 20-13 in Week 7. 

“Coach (Jon) Guidie does an awesome job and we know they’re a talented team,” McFarland said. “Our guys wanted a chance to play them again and they’re going to get it. It’s time to get back to work and try to figure out what went wrong last time and we’ll try to fix it. They were the more physical team last time, so that’s going to be a point of emphasis for sure.” 

 

Webb City rolled to a 71-20 victory over Belton on Friday night in the district semifinals. Webb City will host rival Carthage next Friday in the district title game. Photo by Tyler Wade.

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 7 SEMIFINALS

WEBB CITY 71, BELTON 20

Belton            0       7     0     13 —20

Webb City   30     34    7       0 ­—71

SCORING SUMMARY

WC: Gabe Johnson 80 run (Alex Dunne kick)

WC: Johnson 54 run (Dunne kick)

WC: Omari Jackson 35 run (Dunne kick)

WC: Safety. 

WC: Drew Vonder Haar 78 pass from Braden McKee (Dunne kick)

WC: Jackson 21 run (Dunne kick)

BEL:  Tyrion Thomas 84 kick return (Coby Clark kick)

WC: Jonah Spieker 56 pass from Johnson (Dunne kick)

WC: Andrew Elwell 8 run (Kick failed)

WC: Andrew Young 84 interception return (Dunne kick)

WC: Slade Hurd 98 run (Dunne kick)

WC: Jackson Lucas 95 run (Dunne kick)

BEL: Jacob Perez 19 run (Run failed)

BEL: Alek Colombo 58 run (Clark kick).

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

 

Webb City defeated Belton 71-20 on Friday. Brody Eggleston is pictured after an interception. 

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Carthage rolls past Smith-Cotton in quarterfinals

CARTHAGE, Mo. — Third-seeded Carthage scored on its first six possessions and took a knee on its seventh en route to a convincing 42-3 victory over sixth-seeded Sedalia Smith-Cotton in the quarterfinals of the Class 5 District 7 football tournament on a chilly Friday night at David Haffner Stadium.

In a clash between Tigers that was played in a steady mist, Carthage built a comfortable 28-3 advantage by intermission on the way to a dominant win.

“That’s how we wanted the game to go tonight,” Carthage coach Jon Guidie said. “We felt like if we didn’t hurt ourselves with penalties and turnovers and if we were really good up front, then we would have success tonight. And we took care of all three of those areas. This win means a lot.” 

Carthage’s ground attack proved tough to contain, as the hosts sustained drives all night.

“We wanted to come in and establish the run game, just like we try to do every week,” Guidie said. “It was working tonight. The offensive line played fantastic tonight. I have to give credit to those offensive line guys tonight.” 

Carthage junior quarterback Brady Carlton scored three rushing touchdowns and passed for another against Sedalia Smith-Cotton on Friday in the district quarterfinals. Photo by Israel Perez.

Carthage went 71 yards on nine plays on the opening drive of the night. Junior quarterback Brady Carlton scored on a 4-yard touchdown run with 7:24 remaining in the first quarter to give the hosts an early 7-0 lead.

Smith-Cotton’s Brayden Butts connected a 42-yard field goal to get the visitors on the board.

However, it was Smith-Cotton’s only score of the night, as the Carthage defense pitched a shutout the rest of the way.

“Our defense was fantastic,” Guidie said. “They’ve got a really good running back (Mylan Hawkins) who has put up a lot of yards. He’s pretty elusive. I thought we were able to contain him and not let him get loose. Our kids covered the back end, too. I’m really proud of those guys.” 

The hosts scored 21 unanswered points in the second period.

In fact, Carthage scored on the first play of the second quarter when junior running back Landyn Collins scampered into the end zone from 3 yards out. The touchdown capped a 10-play, 73-yard drive.

The PAT kick by junior Luis Fuentes made it 14-3 with 11:56 left in the second quarter.

Finishing off a 64-yard drive on eight plays, Carlton’s second touchdown of the night, this time from 2 yards out, made it 21-3 with 4:05 remaining in the first half.

After a Smith-Cotton punt, Carthage made it 4-for-4 on first half possessions, as Carlton’s 4-yard touchdown run up the middle with eight seconds left gave the hosts a 28-3 cushion.

After halftime, it was more of the same.

Carthage added a pair of touchdowns in the third quarter for the final margin.

Collins scored on a 1-yard run, finishing off a 12-play drive and giving the host Tigers a 35-3 lead.

With four seconds left in the third quarter, Carlton completed a 16-yard touchdown pass to junior Jackson Hettinger.

That was Carthage’s sixth score on six possessions.

Carthage’s Jackson Hettinger is pictured during Friday’s district quarterfinal matchup with Smith-Cotton. Hettinger hauled in a touchdown pass in his team’s 42-3 win.

Smith-Cotton (2-8) had a turnover on downs with eight minutes remaining in the game before the hosts took over possession and eventually ran out the clock.

With just under 30 seconds to play, Carthage took a knee near the 5-yard line. It was the only time a CHS drive didn’t result in a touchdown all game.

Carthage finished with 358 yards, with 320 rushing and 38 passing. 

Smith-Cotton was limited to 72 yards, 44 rushing and 28 passing.

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Defending district champion Carthage (6-4) will travel to second-seeded Raytown South (8-2) in the semifinals next Friday.

“We don’t know much about them, so we have a lot of work to do,” Guidie commented about his team’s next opponent. “That’s what fun about this time of the year. You get to see some new teams.”

Carthage has built plenty of momentum heading into the district semifinals, as the Tigers have won six of their last seven games. 

“I’m just really proud of these guys,” Guidie said. “I’m happy for our kids and our coaches. When you have success like that, it just builds confidence in the kids. You can see it every single week. They’re not ready to be done yet.”

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 7 QUARTERFINALS

CARTHAGE 42, SMITH-COTTON 3

Smith-Cotton   3    0    0    0   — 3

Carthage           7   21    14   0  — 42

SCORING SUMMARY

CAR: Brady Carlton 4 run (Luis Fuentes kick)

SC: Brayden Butts 42 field goal

CAR: Landyn Collins 3 run (Fuentes kick)

CAR: Carlton 2 run (Fuentes kick)

CAR: Carlton 4 run (Fuentes kick)

CAR: Collins 1 run (Fuentes kick)

CAR: Jackson Hettinger 16 pass from Carlton (Fuentes kick).

 

Carthage junior running back Landyn Collins sprints past the Smith-Cotton defense during Friday’s game at Haffner Stadium. Collins scored a pair of touchdowns in his team’s 42-3 win.

 

Carthage’s Noah Norbury is pictured during Friday’s district quarterfinal contest against Smith-Cotton. Carthage won the game 42-3. Photo by Israel Perez.

FOOTBALL: Seneca secures outright Big 8 West crown with thrilling seesaw victory over Nevada

 

A dramatic late-game scoring drive propelled the Seneca Indians to a 40-36 victory over the Nevada Tigers, while in the process, also locking up the outright Big 8 West division championship Friday night at Nevada High School’s Logan Field. 

The stakes were high for Seneca (9-0, 6-0) in a matchup that pitted state-ranked squads, as a loss would have relegated the Indians to a three-way share of the Big 8 West title with Nevada and Lamar. 

The Indians’ normally reliable run defense was flattened by Nevada running backs Jack Cheaney and Dezmon Robinson in the first half, as the tandem racked up a combined 252 yards on the ground, with Cheaney accounting for 205. 

Nevada junior tailback Jack Cheaney detonates for a 99-yard touchdown run late in the first half of Friday night’s loss to visiting Seneca. Photo by Bill Wynn.

Cheaney detonated for a 75-yard touchdown run early in the first quarter, while closing out the first half with a 99-yard romp to paydirt. In between, Robinson’s 37-yard scamper to the end zone helped the Tigers to a 21-14 halftime lead. 

The Tigers (7-2, 4-2) capitalized on an Indians’ miscue early in the second half, with a short scoring drive capped by Cheaney’s 30-yard touchdown run. 

Trailing 28-14, the Indians replied with a quick-strike drive that was punctuated by Ethan Altic’s six-yard rushing score on a reverse pitch — but the Indians trailed 28-20 after an unsuccessful two-point play.

Early in the fourth, and back in possession, quarterback Gavyn Hoover’s 45-yard run down the left sideline was followed by Jackson Marrs’ five-yard rushing score. Marrs then powered in from two yards out on the 2-point play, knotting the contest at 28. 

Looking to make another big play, Cheaney was unable to secure the catch on the ensuing kickoff, turning the ball over deep in Nevada territory. Three plays later, Marrs gained the right edge en route to a 14-yard rushing score. A failed 2-point conversion left the Indians with a 34-28 lead near the midpoint of the fourth. 

Seneca quarterback Gavyn Hoover runs for a big play during Friday night’s road victory over Nevada. Photo by Brandi Redman.

After yielding 20 unanswered points, the Tigers needed only a few plays to find the end zone, with Robinson’s elusiveness paying dividends on a 41-yard touchdown run — followed by Grady Stewart’s quarterback sneak on the 2-point play for a 36-34 Nevada lead.

Seneca saved its best for last, chewing up more than six minutes of clock on a methodical 15-play scoring drive. 

With 19 seconds remaining, Hoover rolled to his right and connected with junior wide-out Hagen Ginger in the corner of the end zone, accounting for the final margin. 

On the game’s final play, Gabe Smith’s pass attempt deep downfield fell incomplete. 

Cheaney, meanwhile, rushed for 283 yards on 16 carries, to go along with three touchdowns — giving him 24 for the season. 

For Seneca, Marrs also finished the night with three touchdown runs.

Second-ranked Seneca will be the No. 1 seed for the Class 3 District 6 tournament and have a first-round bye.

Seventh-ranked Nevada will be the No. 1 seed for the Class 4 District 7 tournament and the Tigers will also have a bye next Friday. 

 

Nevada running back Dezmon Robinson finds room to run on a 37-yard rushing touchdown Friday night. Photo by Brandi Redman.

FOOTBALL: Carthage stuns No. 2 Webb City in Week 7

CARTHAGE, Mo. — As the longest tenured head football coach in the Central Ozark Conference, Carthage’s Jon Guidie has recorded many memorable victories over the years.

But Guidie’s latest coaching win is likely to rank high on his list of significant regular season triumphs. 

Led by a strong rushing attack and a solid defensive effort, Carthage knocked off Class 5 No. 2 Webb City 20-13 on a chilly Friday night at David Haffner Stadium.

It’s safe to say the Tigers entered the matchup as the clear underdog.

“Obviously, this is a huge win over a very good football team,” Guidie said. “It’s a big rivalry. Webb City was red hot coming in. And any time you can beat Webb City, it’s big. I’m just really proud of these kids and the fight they showed tonight. This is a quality win, so we’re just really happy for the kids.” 

The Cardinals and Tigers both entered the Week 7 rivalry matchup with plenty of momentum. 

Webb City had won five straight games, while Carthage was riding a three-game winning streak. With that, something had to give. In the end, it was the host Tigers who kept their streak alive.

Carthage QB Brady Carlton hands off to Landyn Collins during Friday’s game with Webb City at David Haffner Stadium. Photo by Israel Perez.

Simply put, Carthage’s offense was able to sustain drives and keep Webb City’s high-powered offense off the field. In the most glaring statistic of the night, Carthage had more than 32 minutes of time of possession (32:13) to Webb City’s 15:47.

“We took six minutes off the clock on one possession and five minutes off the clock with another drive,” Guidie noted. “You have to do that against a team that has an explosive offense. You have to control the ball and control the clock and our kids were able to do that tonight. We converted some third downs and key fourth downs. Those were big.”

Carthage ran 60 offensive plays to Webb City’s 37. The hosts recorded 18 first downs to Webb City’s nine.

“Offensively, it didn’t feel like we had very many snaps,” Webb City coach Ryan McFarland said. “It was hard to get a feel for what they were trying to do defensively because we didn’t get to run a lot of plays. We were slow to make some adjustments because of the limited snaps we had.” 

The Cardinals entered the night averaging 43 points per game during their winning streak, but the Tigers limited the visitors to two scores, both in the first half. 

“We gave up a big play early, and they have some good kids and some speed,” Guidie said. “I thought our defense tightened up and we were able to get a turnover before the half. That was big. I thought the defense settled down and played really well.”

Carthage improved to 4-3 with a fourth straight win. 

“I’m very happy with this team,” Guidie said. “They’re getting better and gaining confidence and I still think we have a ways to go. It’s very gratifying to coach this group in particular. We’ve got 11 new starters on defense…and we started five sophomores tonight. It’s just very gratifying to see these guys have the success they’ve had.” 

Carthage held a 20-13 lead at halftime, and despite some promising opportunities, neither team scored after the break. 

 

GAME RECAP

Webb City QB Braden McKee hands off to Noah Durman during Friday’s game at Carthage. Photo by Israel Perez.

Webb City’s first drive went 72 yards on seven plays and was capped by junior running back Andrew Elwell’s 3-yard touchdown run at the 9:15 mark of the opening quarter.

Carthage responded on its first series, as senior Darrin Witt recorded a 32-yard touchdown run with 3:17 left in the first period, capping an 11-play, 74-yard drive.

Back in the lineup after missing time with an injury, Webb City sophomore QB/RB/WR Gabe Johnson made his presence known by sprinting past the CHS defense for a dazzling 67-yard score, giving the Cardinals a 13-7 advantage after the PAT kick failed.

“Our guys executed our game plan early in the game,” McFarland said. “It was nice to have Gabe Johnson back because he’s such a big playmaker.”

The Tigers tied it up on junior running back Landyn Collins’ 1-yard touchdown plunge at the 10:07 mark of the second quarter. Webb City’s Brody Eggleston blocked the PAT kick to keep it 13-all. 

The Tigers took the lead for good with 2:53 remaining in the first half by coming through in the clutch. 

Facing fourth and 3, Carthage took a 20-13 lead when Collins hauled in a short pass from junior quarterback Brady Carlton and then broke several tackles on the way to a 42-yard touchdown.

The two teams traded turnovers late in the first half, and both squads turned the ball over on downs to start the second half.

The Tigers continued to eat up a lot of the clock with a time-consuming drive that concluded with another turnover on downs with nine minutes left in the game. 

A couple of untimely penalties hurt Webb City’s potential game-tying drive with just over six minutes to play.

Darrin Witt

Late in the game, the Cardinals recovered a CHS fumble with 1:12 remaining and with about 67 yards to go. A last-second Hail Mary was off the mark, and the Tigers celebrated a hard-fought victory.

“We turned the ball over twice in the second half, but we didn’t let it beat us,” Guidie said. “Maybe that’s a sign of maturity or growing up.” 

 

NAMES & NUMBERS

The Tigers racked up 320 yards of offense, with 266 on the ground and 54 through the air. 

“They’re a very physical football team and they run hard,” McFarland said of the Tigers. “It’s hard to simulate that in practice. We haven’t seen a team just line up and try to run over us the last few weeks. I think they caught us off guard. In the first half, their yards after contact was probably three or four yards per play. They were able to get first downs. I thought we made some adjustments defensively in the second half, and we were able to get some stops.” 

Collins ran 28 times for 107 yards and Carlton had 105 rushing yards on 20 carries. Both players showed the ability to pick up extra yardage after an initial hit on several gains.

“We talked at halftime about how hard Landyn and Brady were running,” Guidie said. “It seemed like they had an extra gear tonight. Getting an extra yard or two was very important when you want to control the ball.” 

Trevor Meadows (six tackles) and Noah Norbury (five tackles) led the Carthage defense.

Webb City finished with 225 yards, 172 rushing and 53 passing.

Johnson ran 10 times for 104 yards to lead the Webb City offense. Senior quarterback Braden McKee completed 3 of 7 passes for 32 yards and Johnson went 3 of 4 for 21 passing yards.

Conner Gayman had 13 tackles for the Cardinals, while Tucker Liberatore had 10. 

Webb City slipped to 5-2 on the season with the setback.

McFarland noted Carthage was the more physical team in the matchup, and added he hopes the loss will provide his squad with extra motivation going forward.

Friday’s contest was the 115th meeting between the longtime rivals since 1920. 

 

WILL THEY MEET AGAIN?

Of course, these two teams are not only conference rivals, but also district foes.

Both squads have been assigned to Class 5 District 7, so a postseason rematch is a possibility.

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Carthage travels to Joplin in Week 8, while Webb City entertains Neosho next Friday night at Cardinal Stadium.

Carthage quarterback Brady Carlton looks to elude the Webb City defense during Friday’s rivalry matchup at David Haffner Stadium. Photo by Israel Perez.

 

Webb City sophomore Gabe Johnson attempts to elude Carthage’s Noah Norbury during Friday’s game at CHS.

 

Carthage running back Landyn Collins looks to avoid the tackle from Webb City’s Conner Gayman on Friday night. Carthage upset No. 2 Webb City 20-13 on Friday. All photos by Israel Perez/SoMo Sports.

 

FULL STATS: Quickie Stats w_ Score Summary 1006[43640].pdf

FOOTBALL: Seneca steamrolls Reeds Spring to remain undefeated

 

SENECA, Mo. — The Seneca Indians continued their torrid start to the season with Friday night’s 54-21 trouncing of the visiting Reeds Spring Wolves. 

Having outscored their first five opponents by a combined 227-14, the Indians entered the contest ranked No. 2 in Class 3. 

Seneca quickly set the tone with its punishing run game — capping a 9-play, 75-yard drive via Jackson Marrs’ 11-yard touchdown run. Quarterback Gavyn Hoover then connected with Morgan Vaughn on the 2-point play for a quick 8-0 lead. 

Lamar had been the only team to have found paydirt against the Indians’ vaunted defense this season, but the Wolves managed to do so on their second possession of the contest.

Seneca’s Brodie Probert tackles Jace Bolin on Friday. Photo by Israel Perez.

With the Reeds Spring leaning on its ground game for the majority of the drive, Seneca’s secondary was caught off guard when Daniel Fliflet hauled in a perfectly placed pass from Blandy Burall for a 22-yard touchdown strike to punctuate the 80-yard scoring drive. A failed 2-point attempt left the Wolves trailing 8-6 midway through the opening frame.

On the ensuing possession, Marrs chewed up major yards on the ground, accentuated by a 28-yard run to the 1-yard line. Marrs then punched it in from the goal line, followed by Roman Miller’s successful run on the 2-point play, handing the Indians a 16-6 advantage.

Seneca extended its lead to 24-6 early in the second quarter. The sequence of events unfolded after the Indians converted a 4th-down conversion with a 25-yard run — as Hoover finished off the drive with a short rushing score. Hoover then called his number on the 2-point play, gliding into the end zone untouched.

Looking to avert a blowout, the Wolves turned to trickeration, faking an end-around run as Christopher Daniels scampered down the left sideline for a 67-yard touchdown romp. The Wolves also hit on the 2-point play, with Burall linking up with James Dowdy to trim the deficit to 24-14.

The Indians managed two more scoring drives over the final five minutes of the half, with Marrs finding paydirt on both — including a 6-yard rushing score with 8 seconds showing on the scoreboard, swelling Seneca’s lead to 40-14.

The Indians ran 41 plays in the first half en route to a decisive time of possession advantage. Marrs also rushed for 115 yards on 15 carries and four touchdowns, while Hoover added another 48.

The Indians tacked on two more touchdowns in the second half, coasting to victory. 

Seneca is now 6-0. The loss drops the Wolves to 4-2. 

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Seneca hits the road for a clash with Big 8 East foe East Newton (2-4), while Reeds Spring squares off with Aurora (3-3).

 

Seneca’s Blake Hurn looks to evade Kaemon Hutchison on Friday night. Seneca remained undefeated by beating Reeds Spring 54-21. Photos by Israel Perez/SoMo Sports.

 

Seneca’s Gavyn Hoover carries the ball while Braiden Langston looks to make the tackle on Friday night at Seneca High School.

 

Seneca’s Ethan Altic is pictured during Friday’s game with Reeds Spring.

 

Seneca’s Roman Miller picks up a big gain on the ground on Friday night.

 

Seneca’s Jackson Marrs is brought down by Spencer Michaud and Braiden Langston on Friday night. The Indians defeated the Wolves 54-21 to remain undefeated. All photos by Israel Perez.

FOOTBALL: Webb City dominates second half, extends winning streak in Week 6 victory

 

WILLARD, Mo. — Overcoming an early 13-point deficit, and riding a dominant second half, Webb City extended its winning streak to five by beating Willard 43-16 on Friday night in Central Ozark Conference action.

Taking the field in front of a large homecoming crowd, Willard scored the game’s first 13 points and took a two-point lead into intermission, 16-14.

But the visiting Cardinals controlled the second half, outscoring the Tigers 29-0 after the break.

Ranked second in Class 5, Webb City is now 5-1 on the season. Despite missing several key performers due to injuries, the Cardinals have won five straight games after dropping the 2023 opener at Nixa.

The Week 6 clash didn’t start out particularly well for Webb City.

The Cardinals turned the ball over on the second play of the night, as Willard’s Omero Inda converted a fumble recovery into the game’s first touchdown.

Willard went up 13-0 at the end of the first quarter on Russell Roweton’s 56-yard QB keeper.

Webb City got on the board with 5:06 remaining in the second quarter on junior running back Noah Durman’s 1-yard touchdown plunge.

After forcing the Tigers to punt, the Cardinals took a 14-13 lead with 1:05 left in the first half after Durman’s 4-yard touchdown run. The Cardinals went 67 yards on the go-ahead drive and were aided by two Willard penalties and a key pass from senior Braden McKee to classmate Payton Marshall.

The Tigers were able to answer just before the break, as Willard’s Jonathan Lupescu connected on a 35-yard field goal with two seconds left in the first half, giving the Tigers a 16-14 halftime advantage.

The second half was all Webb City.

One play after sophomore defensive back Mason Williams grabbed an interception, Webb City’s Durman sprinted to a 32-yard touchdown run, his third score of the night.

Junior wide receiver Joseph DeGraffenreid hauled in the 2-point conversion, giving the Cardinals a 22-16 lead with 7:37 remaining in the third period.

The visitors extended their lead with a little trickery. Senior tight end Jonah Spieker’s 33-yard touchdown reception from McKee on a flea flicker gave Webb City a 29-16 lead with just over 10 minutes left.

Three plays after Willard turned the ball over after failing to secure a punt, Webb City went up 36-16 with 6:21 remaining on McKee’s 10-yard QB keeper.

Junior Kyler Wood’s 2-yard touchdown plunge with just over two minutes showing on the clock accounted for the final margin.

The Tigers fell to 3-3.

Webb City is now 23-0 all-time against Willard.

The Cardinals once again played without several key performers due to injuries, including sophomore QB/RB Gabe Johnson.

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Webb City (5-1) is at rival Carthage (3-3) in Week 7.

FOOTBALL: High-flying Tigers soar past Mount Vernon, move to 5-0

The Nevada Tigers parlayed a powerful rushing attack and timely defensive takeaways into a 55-34 defeat of the visiting Mount Vernon Mountaineers to remain undefeated.

“This was a hard-fought victory,” said Nevada head coach Wes Beachler. “The final score is not indicative of what took place. I thought it was just a really good game that matched two good teams.”

Nevada (5-0) entered Friday night’s matchup as the No. 7 ranked team in Class 4, while the Mountaineers (4-1) rolled into town as the No. 7 ranked team in Class 3. 

Boasting a defense that had yielded just 34 points through four games, the Mountaineers were unable to contain Jack Cheaney, as the junior tailback racked up more than 300 yards of combined offense. Cheaney’s monster performance was accentuated by a 72-yard touchdown romp down the left sideline, staking the Tigers to a 28-14 lead late in the first half. 

The Mountaineers answered with a quick-strike drive that covered 60 yards in just 20 seconds, capped off by Calvin Dawson’s 25-yard touchdown reception to trim the deficit to 28-21 at the half. 

Nevada Tiger tailback Jack Cheaney bolts past Mount Vernon defenders for a big gain during the second half of Friday night’s 55-34 victory at Logan Field. Cheaney electrified with 301 yards of total offense and four touchdowns. Courtesy photo by Brandi Redman.

The Tigers opened the second half with a methodical scoring drive that chewed up nearly six minutes of clock, with Cheaney finding paydirt on a 6-yard rushing score. An off-target extra point left the Tigers with a 34-21 advantage. 

The Mountaineers moved quickly downfield, and on fourth down from midfield, quarterback Gavin Johnston linked up with Ryder Dampf for a 50-yard touchdown strike. After a missed extra point, the Mountaineers trailed 34-27 late in the third.

Facing a fourth-and-goal, Nevada sophomore signal-caller Kellen Braden eluded several Mountaineer defenders as he rolled to his left and scored on the five-yard run. The Tigers led 40-27 after a failed 2-point play. 

Nevada lineman Talan Chandler makes a tackle in the backfield during Friday’s victory at Logan Field. Chandler, a senior, has committed to play for Deion Sanders at the University of Colorado. Courtesy photo by Brandi Redman.

The double-digit lead was short-lived, as Juliun Hernandez hauled in a 12-yard touchdown reception with 10:25 remaining in regulation. 

Trailing 40-34 and back in possession, an ill-advised pass by Johnston as he was being pulled to the ground, resulted in an interception returned for a 20-yard touchdown by lineman Bryan Mendez. 

“We got some big stops when we needed to,” Beachler said. “There was some adversity and challenges tonight.”

Leading 48-34 late in the fourth, Cheaney put the cherry on top with a 43-yard scamper to the end zone.

“Jack is a phenomenal running back with great vision,” Beachler said. “He sees the field well and knows when to cut back and change direction. Players like Jack can turn not-so-great calls into pretty good calls.”

While Nevada’s secondary grappled with busted coverage throughout the contest, Beachler credited Mount Vernon for its strong passing attack. 

“Their receivers were hitting spots well and (Johnston) was throwing in rhythm, so they were tough to stop,” he said. “Conversely, we were running the ball really well most of the night.”

The Mountaineers also faced early adversity, losing All-State running back Braden Dodson to injury. Dodson, who entered the contest averaging 8 yards per carry, returned in the second half —but only on the defensive side of the ball.  

After losing 19 of 20 games between the 2018 and ‘19 seasons, Beachler has orchestrated an impressive turnaround. 

“I’m just happy for the players in the program,” he said. “It’s been a total buy-in, and I’m just proud of the way they play the game, and practice and prepare.”  

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

The Tigers hit the road next Friday for a matchup with Big 8 East foe Cassville (3-2). Mount Vernon, meanwhile, hosts Springfield Catholic (0-5).

 

Nevada safety Brice Budd grabs an interception during the first half of Friday night’s victory at Logan Field. Courtesy photo by Brandi Redman.

FOOTBALL: Webb City rolls to homecoming win

WEBB CITY, Mo. — Playing in front of a large homecoming crowd, Webb City rode a strong defensive effort and a big second half to a dominant 38-0 victory over Ozark on Friday night on John Roderique Field at Cardinal Stadium.

With a fourth straight win, Class 5 No. 2 Webb City hiked its record to 4-1. 

In a stellar performance, the Webb City defense pitched a shutout, forcing seven punts and limiting Ozark’s spread offense to just 78 yards on 34 plays. 

“I have to give credit to our defensive coaches (Trey Derryberry and Aaron Davied),” Webb City coach Ryan McFarland said. “Those guys coordinate the defense. We’ve talked about keeping the defense simple and letting the kids make plays. That’s something we’ve preached all summer long. They’ve done a phenomenal job and our kids show up every Friday night and just play their tails off.” 

Clinging to a 14-0 lead at halftime, the Cardinals reeled off 24 unanswered points in the second half to turn a two-score game into a blowout. 

The Cardinals finished with 507 yards of total offense, with 309 on the ground and 198 through the air. 

Webb City’s offense played without several key performers, including do-it-all sophomore Gabe Johnson and seniors Breckin Galardo and Omari Jackson, but managed to get going in the second half.

“Gabe Johnson didn’t play tonight and we’ve got a lot of guys out, so we’re trying to find our identity on offense,” McFarland said. “We played five running backs tonight and we played three quarterbacks. We’re trying to figure out what their strengths are and how to put them in the best positions to be successful. That will probably be the plan moving forward until we get some guys back.”

In what was the lone score of the opening period, Webb City took a 7-0 lead with 4:58 left in the first quarter when junior QB Jackson Lucas connected with junior running back Noah Durman on an 18-yard touchdown pass.

The Cardinals punted and lost two fumbles in the first half, but the Webb City defense kept the Tigers in check. 

Trailing 7-0, Ozark’s best scoring chance came with just under four minutes left in the first half, but a 29-yard field goal attempt was off the mark.

In a key swing of momentum, the Cardinals scored just before the break to take a two-score lead.

Facing fourth down and 19 on the 29-yard line with just three seconds on the clock, senior QB Braden McKee completed a screen pass to junior running back Andrew Elwell, who weaved his way through the defense and into the end zone to give the hosts a 14-0 lead.

The Cardinals were able to generate much more offense after intermission.

Alex Dunne’s 25-yard field goal at the 8:26 mark of the third period gave the Cardinals a 17-0 advantage.

After Andrew Young’s interception, Webb City extended its lead to 24-0 on Durman’s 1-yard touchdown plunge. The score was set by a nice gain on the ground by Lucas.

Webb City’s senior tight ends got into the act late in the game.

Homecoming King Drew Vonder Haar hauled in a 65-yard touchdown reception with 4:09 left in the third period before Jonah Spieker closed out the scoring by charging into the end zone on a 5-yard run with just over 10 minutes to play.

“We really wanted to get our tight ends involved tonight,” McFarland said. “Drew had the big touchdown catch and that was nice to see. Jonah is our blocking tight end and I told him this week he was going to get some carries. It was nice to get him involved.” 

Webb City only punted once all night and recorded 28 first downs to Ozark’s five.

Durman (75 yards), Lucas (54 yards), Elwell (51 yards) and Slade Hurd (49 yards) carried the load on the ground.

Lucas completed 5 of 6 passes for 119 yards, while McKee passed for 57 yards on six completions. 

Vonder Haar had 72 receiving yards, while Elwell and Joseph DeGraffenreid added 32 yards apiece.

A senior, Dunne made all five of his PAT kicks to go along with the field goal.

A newcomer to Webb City this fall, Dunne has now converted 16 of 18 PAT kicks this season.

“He moved in back in February and he’s been a blessing,” McFarland noted. “We couldn’t find a consistent kicker last year. It’s nice to know when you cross the 25-yard line you can kick a field goal if you have to.”

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Webb City (4-1) travels to Willard (3-2) next Friday night. Willard suffered a 21-20 loss to Republic on Friday.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)