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Ellender pulls away from MCHS for 34-21 win

The Ellender Patriots and Morgan City Tigers were desperate to get their first District 7-4A win Friday night at South Terrebonne Memorial Stadium.

Tied at 21 at halftime, Ellender made the big plays on both sides of the ball, particularly on defense, to pull away with a 34-21 homecoming victory.

“With the distraction of homecoming, we were hoping the kids would have their minds right,” Patriots Coach David McCormick said. “The defense made some great stops, a lot of three-and-outs. The offense came together in the second half and put points on the board.”

Morgan City Coach Eric Howard said, “Ellender made a few more plays in the second half. We just couldn’t get it done when we needed to. We got deep in their end a few times in the second half and just couldn’t put it in the end zone.”

Ellender (2-6 overall, 1-3 in district) took the opening drive 60 yards in 11 plays, capped by 5-yard J’amire Mott touchdown run. Tate Ford made the point after for a 7-0 Patriot lead.

Morgan City (2-6, 0-4) got two turnovers early in the second quarter. First, Tiger defensive end Caron Marcantal recovered a Reginald Williams fumble.
On the next Patriots’ drive, Tiger linebacker Trey Derouen scooped up Patriot quarterback Lynn Parfait’s fumble and returned it 32 yards for a touchdown. Tristin McCullough made the point after, tying the game at 7.

Morgan City grabbed its only lead at the 4:42 mark when Devonta Grogan hit Tate Alcina for a 6-yard touchdown pass to go up 14-7.

Ellender got the big play it needed in the final minute of the first half. Kobe Pellegrin blocked McCullough’s punt, while Dekhyri Williams recovered and returned it to the Tiger 10-yard line.

On the next play, running back Reginald Williams (16 carries, 140 yards and one touchdown) bolted for a 10-yard touchdown, tying the game at 14 at halftime.

“Morgan City took advantage of some miscues, but that block punt was a huge momentum swing for us before halftime,” McCormick said. “That was the spark that lit us for the second half. We work on special teams a lot. That’s a third of the game. We won all three phases.”

Howard said, “We’ve struggled all year with consistency on offense. Our defense has kept us games (with) turnovers and scores. That block punt really hurt us. We got to have better execution.”

Morgan City couldn’t capitalize on a 58-yard kick return by Kerwin Francois to open the second half. Ellender blocked McCullough’s 27-yard field goal attempt to keep the game tied.

The Patriots quickly went 82 yards in six plays on their initial possession. Parfait (11-of-17, 108 yards, a touchdown passing; eight carries, 24 yards, a touchdown rushing) bulldozed 4 yards for a touchdown, giving Ellender the lead for good.

Late in the third quarter, Jahon Johnson galloped for a 14-yard touchdown, increasing Ellender’s lead to 27-14.

Early in the fourth, Parfait found Kobe Hartman on screen pass, and he sprinted 18 yards for a touchdown.

The Patriots defense stifled Morgan City for most of the game; however, penalties also contributed. The Tigers had a punt return touchdown negated by a block in back and three personal foul penalties.

“Coach (Jesse) Turner did a good job adjusting to the pressure Morgan City was bringing,” McCormick said. “I’m proud of the way these kids fought. There were some situations where in the past they would have lost their cool. They stayed focused and had a good game.”

Howard said, “We did what we could defensively. We were on the field a lot. We had two touchdowns taken back by penalties. We just have to keep competing. We have a good shot against Vandebilt next week.”

Morgan City scored in the final two minutes when Alcina hit Grogan (three catches, 128 yards, a touchdown) on a 64-yard touchdown pass.

With only two games left in the regular season, Ellender travels to E.D. White this week for another district battle.

Morgan City will return to action Friday when it hosts Vandebilt Catholic in league play.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Jeff is a sports correspondent for The Houma Courier and Thibodaux Daily Comet. The Daily Review Sports Editor Geoff Stoute contributed to this story.

CCHS survives late scare from Hanson for 16-12 win

Hanson Memorial had the ball and the momentum right where it needed to be late in its District 7-1A contest with Central Catholic.

Trailing 16-12 with 29 seconds left, the Tigers had gained possession of the football at the Central Catholic 10 yard line where it had a first-and-goal for a chance to win the game and snap a 24-game losing streak in the series.

However, the Central Catholic defense wasn’t having any of it, as it forced Hanson quarterback Mason Mendoza to throw four straight incomplete passes to turn the ball over with 7.9 seconds left and preserve a win for Central Catholic.

“Defensively, it might be our best defensive effort of the year,” Central Catholic Coach Tommy Minton said. “Defense played great, fantastic. We put them in bad spots all night, and they just went back out and played and fought through.”

“Offensively, for as well as we moved the ball in the first half, we only had 16 points,” Minton said.

The Eagles were stopped twice in the red zone in the first half, on their first and last drives of the half.

“We’ve got some work to do there,” Minton said.

Central Catholic’s defensive stand marked the end of a thrilling second half between the two squads.

While Central Catholic led 16-0 at the break, Hanson scored two touchdowns in the third period in less than a four-minute span.

The first touchdown came when Mendoza connected with Jake Srigley on a 1-yard completion with 3:36 remaining in the third quarter. Hanson’s extra point was no good for a 16-6 Central Catholic lead.

On the Eagles’ ensuing drive, Hanson’s Jack Vaccarella intercepted Central Catholic quarterback Taylor Blanchard’s pass and returned it to the Central Catholic 26.

A few plays later, the Tigers cut the Central Catholic lead to 16-12 following a 6-yard touchdown run by Mendoza with 41.7 seconds remaining.

The teams exchanged possessions in the fourth quarter, with Central Catholic looking primed to score on its second possession of the quarter when it moved the ball all the way to the Hanson 5-yard line.

However, Davidyione Bias was stopped for a one-yard loss on second down and the team lost 16 yards on third down, setting up a 4th-and-goal situation from the Hanson 22. Blanchard’s pass was incomplete, turning the ball over.

Hanson countered with a drive, which began at the 3:21 mark. On the drive, the Tigers moved the ball to the Central Catholic 39.

However, on second down from the Central Catholic 44, Bryce Grizzaffi reached in front of a Hanson receiver and intercepted the pass, and the Eagles simply could run out the clock and secure the victory.

It wasn’t to be, however, as the Eagles gained just 5 yards on their next possession and were forced to punt from their own 40 yard line.
Hanson blocked the punt and returned it to the Central Catholic 10.

In the first half, Central Catholic scored on consecutive possessions as Central Catholic’s Singleton capped a five-play, 33-yard drive with a 1-yard run with 43.3 seconds remaining in the half. Bias’ two-point run was good for an 8-0 Central Catholic lead.

After a Hanson turnover on downs on its next possession, Singleton took a handoff and raced 61 yards for a score with 10:51 remaining in the first half. DeDe Gant’s two-point conversion run was good for a 16-0 Central Catholic lead.

Singleton led the Eagles with 24 carries for 160 yards and two touchdowns, while Blanchard led the pass game as he completed 3 of 13 passes for 74 yards with one interception. Gant was Central Catholic’s top receiver with three receptions for 74 yards.

Patterson tops Berwick 21-16

Patterson jumped out to a 14-point lead and held on to upend local rival Berwick 21-16 in District 8-3A action Friday at Geisler Stadium in Berwick.

Patterson (5-3 overall, 3-0 in district play) opened the scoring after recovering a Berwick fumble, the first of three Panthers turnovers.

The Lumberjacks took over at their own 49-yard line with 8:33 remaining in the first quarter, and after a sack of quarterback Dajon Richard, the junior standout hit Kia Schexnayder for 14 yards on third-and-17 to set up a fourth-and-three situation at the Berwick 40-yard line.

Patterson picked up the first down after Berwick was called for a 5-yard facemask penalty on the next play. Running back Dontre Nicholas broke free from there for a 35-yard touchdown at the 4:06 mark of the first quarter. Bryce Daigle added the first of three point-after kicks for a 7-0 Patterson lead.

Patterson’s defense forced another three-and-out, playing a mixture of zone and man coverage against Berwick’s potent passing attack. Berwick also was without LSU commit Kenan Jones due to an injury.

“We just did some different stuff, played some zone, played some man and played some zone in the middle of the field just trying to slow them down some,” Patterson Coach Ryan Stewart said.

Patterson added to its lead early in the second quarter on a drive that was aided by two 15-yard penalties (a personal foul and pass interference) against Berwick. Nicholas found the end zone again on a 4-yard run at 10:34 mark. Nicholas carried 22 times for 64 yards and two scores in the game.

Berwick (5-3, 1-2) had its best field position following a Patterson turnover on special teams when a punt touched a ’Jacks’ player and the Panthers recovered on Patterson’s 34-yard line with 8:51 remaining in the first half. But the Berwick offense was turned away on a fourth-and-14 situation at 23-yard line.

Berwick got the ball back at the 5:05 mark, and quarterback Mitchell Sanford hit standout receiver Josh Carver five times on the drive, including a 15-yard touchdown with 2:42 left in the first half. Seth Canty added the point-after kick, but Patterson still led 14-7. The Lumberjacks would lead by the same margin at the half.

Sanford was 12 of 35 passing for 139 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions, while Carver had 10 receptions for 138 yards and two scores.
After a Barrett Hover interception stifled Patterson’s first drive of the second half, momentum seemed to be swinging in Berwick’s direction. But Patterson’s defense forced a three-and-out, and Richard hit Irving Celestine for a 47-yard gain, which led to a 1-yard scoring run by Richard with 3:13 remaining in the third quarter to extend Patterson’s lead to 21-7.

“Irving has been making some big plays for us in the passing game the last couple weeks,” Stewart said. “He seems to have a knack for it, and we needed it because Berwick did a real good job of shutting down our rushing attack.”

Patterson rolled up 338 total yards (216 rushing and 122 passing). Richard was 4 of 7 passing for 76 yards, while Randy Paul Jr. was 3 of 5 passing for 46 yards. Richard also carried 24 times for 122 yards and a score. Top Patterson receivers were Celestine and Richard with one catch for 47 and 40 yards, respectively. Drew Lucas added three receptions for 18 yards.

Berwick wasn’t done, grabbing an onside kick attempt at the Patterson 48-yard line. Patterson attempted an onside kick on every kickoff Friday, giving Berwick great field position.

This time, the Panthers made Patterson pay with three chunk plays, a 20-yard pass to Carver, a 15-yard run from Josh Jones and 15-yard touchdown pass to Carver at the 2:35 mark of the third quarter. The point-after kick failed, however, for a 21-13 Patterson lead.

Josh Jones was Berwick‘s leading rusher with 12 totes for 76 yards, while Sanford carried 12 times for 35 yards.

Patterson turned the ball over on downs, and Canty hit a 30-yard field goal with 11:29 left in the contest to make it a one-score game at 21-16.
Patterson followed with a nine-play drive before punting with 6:25 remaining.

Berwick got a 25-yard run from Josh Jones and a 10-yarder from Sanford to setup a first-and-10 at the Patterson 34-yard line. But Richard intercepted Sanford’s next pass to give the ball back to the ‘Jacks’ with 5:13 remaining.

Patterson’s defense made another fourth-down stop at the 1:20 mark but was forced to punt again.

Richard, however, uncoiled a 50-yard punt, pushing Berwick deep in its own territory with 33 seconds left. Berwick missed on four passes to end the game.
The Panthers had 250 total yards (111 rushing and 139 passing).

“They were a better team than us tonight,” Berwick Coach Eric Holden said.

Both teams will continue district play Friday as Berwick travels to Abbeville, while Patterson will host Erath.

Police: Minor injuries to teen whose car flipped

A teen was treated for minor injuries Monday morning after the vehicle she was driving flipped and struck a wall when she lost control on U.S. 90 in Morgan City, according to police.

At 7:10 a.m. Monday, Morgan City police responded to a single-vehicle crash on U.S. 90 just east of the Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard off ramp, Lt. John Schaff said.

The driver, Marisleysis Guillen, 17, was cited for careless operation of a motor vehicle with a crash and no driver’s license. Guillen was transported to Teche Regional Medical Center to be treated for minor injuries, Schaff said.

The vehicle was traveling west when Guillen lost control for unknown reasons. The vehicle then struck the wall on the side of the U.S. 90 bridge and flipped a couple of times, Schaff said.

Traffic was diverted at the Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard exit for about 45 minutes until police cleared the scene.

Storms knock out power in St. Mary

Several thousand residents in St. Mary Parish lost power this weekend, at least partly because of severe storms, according to officials.

Morgan City lost power citywide late Saturday morning after losing its connection through Cleco at the Bayou Ramos power substation, City Utilities Director Bill Cefalu said.

Cleco Spokeswoman Jennifer Cahill said at 9:45 a.m. Saturday Cleco officials found a fault in a circuit breaker that feeds the Bayou Ramos substation. Cleco safely re-energized the connection about an hour later, Cahill said.

Just after 11 a.m. Sunday, a storm came through the area and wind knocked out the Young Road and Klingsville circuits, Cefalu said. Power was restored to the Youngs Road area in about 15 minutes.

Some wire burnt on Pecan Street on the Klingsville circuit, so that area stayed without power for almost two hours, Cefalu said.

About 4,500 Cleco customers lost power around 11 a.m. Sunday in St. Mary Parish, Cahill said. The causes of the outages were all storm related, she said. Over 4,000 customers got power back within an hour, but there were scattered outages that continued longer.

The specific time of the outages was not available as of 9 a.m. Monday morning.

MCHS falls to E.D. White

The Morgan City High School volleyball team fell to E.D. White in three games in District 8-III action in Morgan City Thursday.
Morgan City fell by scores of 25-17, 25-22, 25-16.
No individual stats were available.
Morgan City (15-11 overall, 3-1 in district) will return to action Saturday when it travels to face South Terrebonne and Central Lafourche.
Berwick falls to
Vandebilt Catholic
The Berwick Lady Panthers fell to Vandebilt Catholic in three games in Houma Wednesday in District 8-III action.
Berwick fell by scores of 25-13, 25-12 and 25-11.
Alyssa Gray led Berwick with two kills, six assists and six digs. Other top Berwick contributors were Brittany Roberie, 15 digs; Hannah Henry, three assists, one ace and five digs; Morgan Toups, three kills, one dig and two solo blocks; and Katie Conrad, two kills, one ace and four digs.
Berwick (14-18, 0-4) will return to action Saturday when it participates in Baton Rouge High’s tournament.

BHPA Fall League Week 6 report

Bayou Horseshoe Pitchers Association Fall League Week 6 W L All Blue 30.5 23.5 Pink & Blue 28.5 25.5 Over The Hill 28 26 Mud Slingers 21 33 Scratch point average: Al Dodson 72.6, Dudley Michel 70.6, Gerald Prados 66.5, Angela Percle 64.1 and Linda Dodson 57.7. High individual ringer percentage: Michel 50.8, Prados 48.8, A. Dodson 47.1, Percle 44.2 and L. Dodson 35.8. High scratch game: Michel 89, A. Dodson 88, Prados 81, Percle 72 and ...

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Progressive League bowling report

PROGRESSIVE LEAGUE Oct. 17 – Week 6 W L Gutter Cleaners 16 8 Wild Ones 13½ 10½ Rolling Stoned 11½ 12½ Putt’s Honk Tonk 11 13 Bowling Stones 9 15 High scratch series and game of 976 and 348 were bowled by Putts Honky Tonk . High handicap series and game of 1297 and 457 were bowled by Wild Ones. High scratch bowlers were Beverly Mayon 493 (166, 159, 168), (Lillian Rebardie 483 (138, 189, 156) and Virginia Dean 471 (146, 166, 159). One split conversion was accomplished by Beverly Mayon 3-10. ...

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