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By GREG WILLE


BELTON – The momentum Belton gained in its season-opening win at Georgetown was slowed by back-to-back home losses to Round Rock and Pflugerville Hendrickson. However, the Tigers have an opportunity to get back on the proverbial horse when they begin District 12-6A competition against winless Copperas Cove at 7:30 tonight at Bulldawg Stadium.

Both Belton (1-2) and Cove (0-3) had their open dates last week. The Bulldawgs of second-year head coach Jason Hammett have lost 10 consecutive games dating to last season, and Cove is 4-19 overall in the last three seasons.

Coach Brett Sniffin’s Tigers produced plenty of offense in their season-opening 35-31 victory at Georgetown, but the Tigers were limited the next two weeks as they lost 35-0 to Round Rock and then 17-14 to Hendrickson. Belton’s offense is averaging 243 yards per game.

Tigers sophomore quarterback Ty Brown (427 passing yards, four touchdowns) has a pair of skilled targets in seniors Seth Morgan (16 catches, 212 yards, two TDs) and Houston-committed tight end Bryan “Itty” Henry (nine receptions, 126 yards, two TDs).

Junior linebacker Donovan Thompson has 25 tackles and senior safety Aaron Bain has 23 stops for a Belton defense that’s allowed 292.3 yards per game. Tigers senior cornerback Connor Whitman has two interceptions.

Copperas Cove has struggled on defense in losses to Round Rock Stony Point (69-27), Georgetown (63-39) and Austin Bowie (42-28), permitting 532.3 yards per game. The Bulldawgs have two effective running backs with Craig Brown (335 yards, one touchdown) and Malcom Roberts (154 yards, six TDs). Senior quarterback Shane Richey has passed for 377 yards and one TD.

Belton’s first home district game at Tiger Field will be against Bryan (0-3) at 7:30 p.m. next Friday.


Lake Belton shoots for 5-0 start

in home battle vs. Katy Jordan

The second-year Lake Belton Broncos have ripped off four consecutive wins to begin their first varsity season, and they’ll be halfway to a 10-0 season if they defeat Katy Jordan (1-3) in tonight’s matchup that kicks off at 7 at Tiger Field on the Belton High School campus.

Coach Brian Cope’s Lake Belton team earned a 28-14 home victory against Cameron Yoe a week ago. Junior D’Arius Wilkerson rushed for two short touchdowns, sophomore Micah Hudson had a 15-yard TD run and Connor Crews threw a 64-yard touchdown pass to fellow junior Jaydon Leza early in the fourth quarter to provide some breathing room.

After shutting out winless Yoe in the first half, the Broncos’ defense allowed two rushing touchdowns to Phaibian Bynaum in the second half. Junior safety Javeon Wilcox has made a team-leading 46 tackles for Lake Belton, which has permitted only 17.3 points per game.

Junior linebacker Connor Brennan has 28 tackles, junior cornerback Bruce Onchweri has 27 stops and sophomore Ty Legg made a diving interception to stop a Yoe drive in the first half.

Like Lake Belton, Jordan is a second-year school playing its first varsity season. The Warriors beat Danbury 57-0 on Sept. 3 for their first varsity win. They’re coming off of a 52-45 loss last week at San Antonio Davenport, which handed the Broncos their only loss last year but later lost the rematch at Lake Belton.

The Broncos defeated the Warriors twice last season, and the schools will meet twice again this year. Jordan, whose campus is located in Fulshear, is scheduled to host Lake Belton at noon on Oct. 16.


After another 4-0 non-district run, Academy

hosts Lorena in intriguing league-opening duel

LITTLE RIVER-ACADEMY – For the second straight season, the Academy Bumblebees ran the table in non-district play for a 4-0 record. In tonight’s District 11-3A Division I opener at 7:30 at John Glover Stadium, they’ll try to flip last year’s script by defeating defending league champion Lorena (2-2).

One year ago, the Leopards stopped the Bees’ unbeaten run with a 41-27 win in Lorena. Academy went on to grab the district’s fourth and final playoff berth at 3-3 in head coach Chris Lancaster’s first season, while the Lorena squad of veteran head coach Ray Biles won the league title outright at 5-1.

Both teams lost in the playoffs to eventual state runner-up Hallettsville – the Bees in bi-district and the Leopards in a Region III semifinal.

Academy completed its perfect non-district run last Friday with a 30-28 win at previously unbeaten Lago Vista, highlighted by senior kicker Blake Bundy’s go-ahead 30-yard field goal with 1:36 remaining. It was Bundy’s third field goal of the night.

A 74-yard run by junior Brayden Bartlett was the only offensive touchdown for the Bees, who got two defensive TDs from senior linebacker Darion Franklin – a 35-yard fumble return in the first quarter and a 33-yard interception return in the second.

On the negative side for Academy, sophomore two-way lineman Tyler Burnett was lost to a lower-leg injury.

Bees sophomore quarterback Kasey Mraz has passed for 815 yards and nine touchdowns, and his top target is junior receiver Scout Brazeal with 19 catches for 458 yards and four TDs. Junior linebackers Lane Ward and Clayton Lawson lead the Bees with 44 and 33 tackles, respectively, and safety Brazeal has 30 stops and an interception.

Academy’s defense will face a major challenge against Lorena’s productive attack. Senior quarterback Ryne Abel has thrown for 717 yards and five touchdowns, passing primarily to dangerous sophomore Jadon Porter (18 catches, 288 yards, three TDs) – last year’s Offensive Newcomer of the Year in the district – and junior Kason Taylor (14 catches, 232 yards, one TD). The Leopards also have an effective runner in senior Reed Michna, who’s rushed for 365 yards and six touchdowns.

Lorena has last year’s district Defensive Newcomer of the Year in 6-foot-4, 280-pound junior tackle Joe Gutshall, who’s made 19 tackles (five for loss) this year.

The Leopards lost their first two games this season against strong competition: 27-20 to 3A Division II No. 1-ranked Franklin and 21-13 at 4A D-II stalwart China Spring. Lorena bounced back by beating Gatesville 54-0 and winning 49-16 at Madisonville last week.


At 2-2, Rogers seeks to get on a roll in

district opener vs. familiar foe Buffalo

ROGERS – After the Rogers Eagles emerged from a challenging non-district schedule with a 2-2 record, they aim to take that experience and turn it into a strong run in District 13-3A Division II play, which begins against Buffalo (1-3) at 7:30 tonight at Merk Field.

Coach Charlie Roten’s Rogers squad led 3A D-I West 28-27 entering the fourth quarter a week ago, but the visiting Trojans used a 2-yard touchdown run by Gage Gordon and his 2-point run to seize a 35-28 victory.

Expolosive Eagles senior Christian Riley turned in an outstanding performance, rushing for 209 yards and three touchdowns on only nine carries along with a 2-point run. His TDs covered 16, 78 and 66 yards. Riley Dolgener threw a 60-yard TD pass to Zach Davis.

Senior Jordan Werner collected 19 tackles against West and leads the Eagles with 34 stops this season, while junior Brice Lisenbe has 26.

Rogers is very familiar with tonight’s district-opening opponent, Buffalo. It will be their fourth matchup in the last three seasons. The Eagles rallied past the Bison for a 36-33 bi-district playoff win in 2019, but Buffalo responded last year by beating Rogers 46-28 in district play and then edging the Eagles 37-35 in a Region IV semifinal.

A 19-9 win at Palestine Westwood three weeks ago was Buffalo’s first win with new head coach Evan Stone, but the Bison come to Rogers after consecutive losses to Crockett (59-42) and Teague (27-18).


After blowing out Mexia, Salado shoots

to defeat Taylor in non-district finale

SALADO – On the heels of dismantling Mexia 57-0 at home last Friday, the Salado Eagles (2-2) seek their first two-game winning streak this season when they host the improved Taylor Ducks (3-1) at 7:30 tonight at Eagle Stadium.

It’s Salado’s fifth and final non-district game before the Eagles begin defense of their District 9-4A Division II championship next Friday at Gatesville.

Salado dominated host Taylor 49-3 a year ago, but the Ducks have made strides in their first season with head coach Brandon Houston. Houston was an assistant coach on Rockdale’s Class 3A Division I state championship team in 2017 and then coached Buffalo to a 32-6 record from 2018-20 before taking the Taylor job.

Salado’s traditional Slot-T rushing attack of head coach Alan Haire is getting balanced production from senior Aidan Wilson (492 yards, five touchdowns) and juniors Caden Strickland (303 yards, four TDs) and Seth Reavis (274 yards, two TDs).

Eagles senior quarterback Hutton Haire has been efficient and productive when he has passed, throwing for 389 yards and six touchdowns. He connected with senior tight end Gavyn Keyser for two TDs totaling 78 yards against Mexia.

Salado’s defense recorded its second shutout victory of the season last week. The Eagles’ leaders on that side include Josh Huckabee with 39 tackles, Nolan Miller with 38, Nic Bates with 37 and Braydon Sumners with 33.

Taylor brings a two-game winning streak to Salado after beating Giddings 48-28 and La Vernia 18-14. Ducks dual-threat sophomore quarterback Joshua Mikulencak has passed for 679 yards and eight touchdowns, and junior Jarvis Anderson has 365 rushing yards and three TDs to go with 203 receiving yards and five TDs. Junior Connor Cobb has 14 receptions for 263 yards and three touchdowns.

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MET WITH RESISTANCE: Senior linebacker Faylin Lee (12) and other Temple defenders combine to tackle a Hutto ball carrier during the Wildcats' 60-53 home victory over the Hippos on Sept. 10 at Wildcat Stadium. After an open week, defending District 12-6A champion Temple (1-2) seeks to win its league opener at Bryan (0-3) at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Merrill Green Stadium. The Vikings, who lost 44-7 at Temple last October, have been limited to 14 points in each of their three games. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


BRYAN – In the eyes of Temple head football coach Scott Stewart, his Wildcats didn’t play with nearly enough physicality in their first two games this season – home losses of 54-13 to top-ranked Austin Westlake and 27-14 against Magnolia West.

So before Temple hosted Hutto in the non-district finale two weeks ago, Stewart delivered a very stern, direct message to his then-winless team.

“My whole deal before that game was, ‘I want people on the stinkin’ ground. I want ’em on the ground. I don’t want any Wildcat to get up on his own. I want someone over there helping him up. But I want people who are willing to get on the ground. If we can start there, the physicality will increase, because if you’re willing to get on the ground and get dirty and get after it, then that at least gets us going in the right direction,’” Stewart recalled Tuesday. “We took some steps there.”

The result was a 60-53 victory in which big-play Temple led 52-21 entering the fourth quarter before the Hippos scored five touchdowns – four in the final 5 minutes against backup defenders – to make the final score closer than the game essentially was.

Stewart was none too pleased about the Wildcats’ late-game struggles, but from an all-around perspective he did like the renewed sense of physicality they played with at his persistent urging.

“We had some blocking after the whistle – it wasn’t anything ‘cheap’ – and we had a couple of penalties with guys trying to block (Hutto) guys onto the track. ‘OK, I’ll take that,’” Stewart said. “We have a football constitution, and one of the things is to play legal. But some of those (plays), it’s like, ‘OK, lesson learned. Don’t do that, but good job.’

“Again, none of these were late hits. They were continuous plays after the whistle, like I start blocking a guy and I may or may not hear the whistle. I can coach that. My dad said a hundred years ago that it’s easier to teach ‘whoa’ than ‘giddy up.’ I appreciate it more than most if you’re willing to put him in Lane 3 on his back. I’m OK with some ‘play hard’ penalties.”

After a three-game non-district run that included enough good, bad and ugly to satisfy Clint Eastwood, and following its open date in the schedule, defending District 12-6A champion Temple (1-2) now is set to begin league play on the road against the Bryan Vikings (0-3) of longtime head coach Ross Rogers at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Merrill Green Stadium.

Bryan lost 44-7 at Temple last year, and this season the Vikings have been outscored 97-42 – producing only 14 points in each game – by Lucas Lovejoy, The Woodlands College Park and Brenham. Rogers missed Bryan's first two games after testing positive for COVID-19, then returned to the sideline in last week's 29-14 loss at Brenham. The Vikings have been without junior quarterback Malcom Gooden, a returning starter who reportedly suffered a season-ending leg injury in the opener.

From Stewart’s vantage point, a wounded Viking is a dangerous Viking, so he and Temple are fully prepared to get Bryan’s best effort to begin district action.

“There’s no question, and they should get ours. There’s only one way to get some of that bad taste out of your mouth, and that’s to start on the right foot in that second season,” Stewart said. “I think it’s easier to have that (mentality) when you’re 1-2 and didn’t really handle the end of the (last) game like you wanted to. We’ve got a lot of work to do, and that ain’t all bad. I’d love to be sitting here at 3-0, but you’ve got to flush it and dump it. Everybody’s 0-0 right now.

“Bryan’s a very physical football team and I think they take a lot of pride in playing at home. They’re a good team. When your quarterback goes down in the first game, there’s going to be an identity change. I’ll tell you, I don’t like playing Ross Rogers after a week off. He’s as good as there is in this business of attacking what you do and putting his guys in the right spots. We’re going to have to be sound.”

Stewart’s next win will be his 50th victory in six seasons as head coach of the Wildcats, who seek their ninth consecutive playoff appearance and a third straight season of earning at least a share of a district championship.

He discussed the importance of leaving non-district play in the rear-view mirror and approaching the battle at Bryan as the first game of an entirely new season.

“You have two seasons in a football season, and there’s potentially a third (in the playoffs). The first one gets you ready for the second one,” Stewart said. “I think it’s important that no matter what happens in predistrict that you approach it that way.

“I’ve been fortunate enough – or unfortunate enough, however it turns out – to be sitting here at 3-0 or 4-0 and you think you’ve got your stuff figured out, and then you walk into a pretty competitive district with a lot of parity and all of a sudden it’s like, ‘Woah.’ You have to approach it like a new season, and that’s what we’re trying to do.”

Temple sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield passed for 302 yards and three long touchdowns – two to Devan Williams and one to fellow senior receiver Andre Anderson – against Hutto to highlight the Wildcats’ breakthrough first win.

“That was real nice, and now we’ve got Bryan for our first district game, so we’re on that film like no other. We’ve been watching them a whole lot,” Rumfield said. “We’re not taking this lightly because they’re 0-3.”

In a scheduling abnormality, Temple began its season with three straight home games followed by an open date, so this will be the Wildcats’ first road trip since their Aug. 19 scrimmage at College Station.

“I’m excited to get on the road. We’ve been at home way too long,” Rumfield said with a chuckle. “I think it’s going to be good for us. We need to go somewhere else.”

The Wildcats’ next home game will be a very important one. Next Friday night at Wildcat Stadium, Temple will battle Harker Heights (4-0), which blasted Killeen Ellison 49-8 in Thursday’s 12-6A opener. Heights led Temple 20-0 last year in Killeen before the Wildcats charged back to seize a 38-36 victory.


LONG-RANGE WEAPON: Temple senior wide receiver Devan Williams (left) catches a pass from sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield against two Hutto defenders before racing in for a 65-yard touchdown early in the third quarter of the Wildcats' 60-53 win over the Hippos on Sept. 10 at Wildcat Stadium. Williams also made a 57-yard touchdown catch from Rumfield against Hutto, and they've connected for three TDs in the last two games. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



Temple’s open date last week had Stewart striving to strike the right balance between working to develop a more physical style and allowing key players to recover from the aches and pains of the Wildcats’ grueling first three games.

“The Tuesday before the Hutto game we had five starters not practice because they were banged up. It was nothing major, but (bumps and bruises happen) when you play really good people and really physical teams, which I’ll tell you that Westlake and Mag West are," Stewart said. "Sometimes you don’t know what you’re going to get (during the open week), but I think our kids have handled it real well.

"We had a really good off week. We went back to basics and we got really, really physical. That’s by design, and that’s important, too. Off weeks don’t mean off weeks. I thought we had some good days of work, and then we had a good Monday when was hotter than fish grease. That’s the only thing I know how to do.”

Stewart also took the time to re-evaluate how he and his staff were coaching their players early in the season as the Wildcats struggled to consistently execute in several aspects of the game, including but not limited to line play, pass coverage and special teams.

“Here’s what I did learn. Obviously accountability is a critical part of any organization, whether it be business, personal . . . there’s got to be accountability. But I think there’s a fine line between accountability and just being overly harsh,” Stewart said. “These are kids, and 2021 kids are probably different than 1992 kids, you know what I mean? What we talked about ad nauseam with the coaching staff is we’re going to emphasize with our practices and meetings that our intent is to be a physical football team. I don’t think that’s been at the level where I want it, at least.

“But we’re also going to have fun. That’s going to be the key, to find that balance. Again, in 2021, if kids aren’t having fun, they tend to lose interest. I’ve got two- and three-year lettermen that, for whatever reason, something’s not clicking, so we’re just trying to identify what that is. So (last week) we ended each practice with like a punt contest and the coaches were catching balls and they had to do pushups if they didn’t, just to make it fun. I thought we took some steps against Hutto, just turning it loose and having a good time. We got a little bit sloppy, and sometimes that happens when you say, ‘Turn it loose.’”

Rogers, who beginning in 2000 had a successful run as Harker Heights’ first head coach, guided Bryan to a 6-3 playoff season in 2020, but his Vikings had a disappointing start this year when dynamic quarterback Gooden suffered a right leg fracture early in the opening 44-14 loss to Lovejoy after he had completed three of four passes for 76 yards. The injury is expected to keep him sidelined for the remainder of his junior season.

Replacing Gooden at QB has been junior Karson Dillard, who’s completed only 14 of 50 pass attempts (28 percent) for 220 yards, with two touchdowns and two interceptions. He’s rushed for 45 yards and one TD.

“When your main guy goes down . . . this backup kid, he can spin the ball (as a thrower),” Stewart said about Dillard. “He’s not a bad runner, but he can absolutely spin it. I would imagine they’re going to morph toward that to fit him. They’ll pound it (in the running game), too.”

Bryan’s top receivers are senior Hunter Vivaldi (eight catches, 112 yards) – grandson of the Vikings’ head coach – and junior Tyson Turner (five receptions, 103 yards). Sophomore Isaiah Nutall paces the Vikings’ rushing attack with 134 yards and 6-foot-1, 195-pound senior Du’Wayne Paulhill has run for 80 yards and one TD.

Although Bryan has allowed 32.3 points per game this season, leaning on a burly and athletic defense currently gives the Vikings their best chance to contend for one of 12-6A’s four postseason berths.

Leading Bryan’s defense is menacing senior linebacker Nic Caraway, a Purdue commitment who was Texas Football magazine’s pick for 12-6A preseason Defensive MVP even though Temple junior linebacker Taurean York (39 tackles) is the district’s reigning Defensive MVP.

“Caraway is what they look like, man. He’s 6-3, 240 pounds and top-heavy,” Stewart said. “When he comes downhill, he is very top-heavy, which is exactly the way you’re supposed to play that. They’ve got big defensive linemen and they come off the ball. That all feeds off each other.”

Senior end Tanner Allen was a first-team all-district pick last season, and rangy junior safety Matthew Cooks shared 12-6A’s Defensive Newcomer of the Year award as a sophomore. Paulhill also excels as a hard-hitting safety for a defense that’s coordinated by former Mary Hardin-Baylor standout linebacker Bret Page, who served as Bryan's acting head coach when Rogers had to miss the first two games.

“They are big, big, big and physical on their defensive front. Their front six might be the best collective front six in the district,” Stewart said. “The one thing that pops off is that they play on the other side of the line of scrimmage with their defense. Their defensive line and linebackers are either crossing the line of scrimmage or trying to get to the line as fast as they can.

“And then their third-level guys (Paulhill and Cooks) play like they’re supposed to play. They’ve got that kid at safety (Paulhill) who is not a happy human being.”

Late last October at Wildcat Stadium, Temple was clinging to a 6-0 lead over Bryan midway through the second quarter but then exploded for a barrage of 28 points in a span of 5 minutes, 9 seconds en route to a 34-0 halftime advantage and a 37-point victory.

The Wildcats’ defense limited the Vikings to 149 total yards and didn’t permit a touchdown until 3 minutes into the fourth period. Then-junior running back Samari Howard scored four TDs for Temple on two short runs and receptions of 29 and 43 yards from senior quarterback Humberto Arizmendi.

On Thursday night, Howard – co-MVP of 12-6A last season – announced his verbal commitment to attend and play football for Air Force beginning next season.

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GETTING BETTER ALL THE TIME: In his first season as Temple's starting quarterback, sophomore Reese Rumfield has passed for 478 yards and five touchdowns against two interceptions. After the Wildcats lost to Austin Westlake and Magnolia West, Rumfield broke through by throwing for 302 yards and three TDs in a 60-53 home win over Hutto. Rumfield, who grew up in Belton but had moved to the Dallas-Fort Worth area, arrived at Temple in May after his father, Brock Rumfield, was hired as a Temple assistant coach. Coach Scott Stewart's Wildcats (1-2) begin defense of their District 12-6A championship on Friday when they travel to play the Bryan Vikings (0-3) at 7:30 p.m. at Merrill Green Stadium. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


Five years ago, an 11-year-old Reese Rumfield watched his cousin Zach Rumfield play tight end for Temple’s 2016 football team in the Class 5A Division I state championship game against Dallas Highland Park. A year later, he watched his cousin TJ Rumfield quarterback the Wildcats to the fourth round of the playoffs.

Reese thoroughly enjoyed watching his cousins and their squads achieve great success, but at that stage of his life he had no reason to believe that he’d ever attend Temple High School and play for the Wildcats.

Rumfield lived in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, where his father, former Belton multi-sport standout Brock Rumfield, coached baseball and football at Richardson Pearce. He played his freshman year of high school at Midlothian Heritage after his father joined its coaching staff, and as of late April this year, he was expecting to compete for the Jaguars’ starting quarterback position as a sophomore.

Alas, an unexpected-but-fortuitous series of events led Rumfield – who grew up in Belton until third grade, when his family moved away – to Temple and an opportunity to wear the same blue-front, white-back pants that he watched his cousins perform well in several years ago.

On April 30, Temple cornerbacks coach Chris VanCleave informed Wildcats head coach Scott Stewart that he’d be leaving for a coaching job at Rockdale. Stewart’s immediate search for a replacement piqued the interest of Brock Rumfield, whose wife, Crystal, had earned a promotion with Round Rock-based Dell Technologies, making a move back to Central Texas appealing for the family.

Brock Rumfield’s job interview with Stewart shortly thereafter revealed that it would be a good fit for both sides, and they reached an agreement for the 2021-22 school year. Reese Rumfield already was attending classes in Temple by approximately May 10 and joined the Wildcats’ four-week session of spring football practices about 1½ weeks into them.

“We were totally cool with it. We like it down here. This is more home to us,” Reese Rumfield said Tuesday about his family’s spur-of-the-moment move. “My mom works in Round Rock and it’s like 30 minutes away, so she’s way closer to work and she loves that. We were all excited, because (most of) our family lives down here, too, and we just wanted to be closer to all that. And we just know it’s the Temple Wildcats. I never thought I’d be playing here.”

After outdueling several teammates in a preseason competition to become Temple’s starting quarterback, Rumfield – who turned 16 on July 28 – not only is playing; he’s rapidly improving and growing into the role of a difference-making triggerman.

The 6-foot, 173-pound sophomore had up-and-down performances as the Wildcats began their season with home losses to No. 1-ranked Austin Westlake (3-0) and Magnolia West (4-0), but he broke through by passing for 302 yards and three touchdowns in their 60-53 victory over Hutto two weeks ago at Wildcat Stadium.

“I can definitely do better. I just feel like as I get more experience, I feel way more comfortable. As I keep on going, I think I’ll do fine. I’ve just got to get comfortable with it,” said Rumfield, who’s 26-of-54 passing for 478 yards and five touchdowns – all in the last two games – against two interceptions. “I want to improve a whole lot. I need to improve a whole lot. I think that will come with more experience and as I get older and bigger.

“I need to get bigger, so I’ve been spending a lot of time in the weight room, and my mom’s been feeding me like no other. She’s like, ‘If you want to play at the varsity level, you’ve got to get bigger.’”

Rumfield seeks to keep making positive strides as a passer and a leader when Temple (1-2) begins defense of its District 12-6A championship with a road test against the Bryan Vikings (0-3) at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Merrill Green Stadium.

“The growth he’s made . . . you’ve got to understand, this kid walked on campus in the second week of May. He got 2½ weeks of spring ball, if you can even count it as that, because there was a coach standing behind him saying, ‘OK, this is what this means. This is what this means,’” Stewart said about Rumfield. “He did get some summer stuff and we qualified for the (7-on-7) state tournament.

“Right now I like that he can see the field, he knows what he’s looking at, and then his delivery, he gets the ball out of his hand pretty good. He made some throws (vs. Hutto) where I think you see the ‘wow’ factor with that kid. He’s got great touch. It comes out of his hand quick. He’s pretty confident in his decision-making. He’s got some good insider coaching, and he’s also got some good genetics.”


GOING DEEP: Temple sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield prepares to throw a long pass that senior running back Samari Howard caught for a 67-yard touchdown during the Wildcats' 27-14 home loss to Magnolia West on Sept. 3. The 6-foot, 173-pound Rumfield threw two TD passes that night but also his only two interceptions of his first season with Temple. "I want to improve a whole lot," the 16-year-old said. "I need to improve a whole lot. I think that will come with more experience and as I get older and bigger." (File photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



Before Rumfield, Temple hadn’t entered a season with a non-senior as its starting quarterback since 2013, Chad President's injury-shortened junior year. And the last Wildcats sophomore to start at QB for the majority of a season was Zach Allen in 2010.

Considering that Rumfield didn’t even get to go through all of Temple’s spring practice, offensive coordinator Josh Sadler is very pleased with the steady progress of his skilled young quarterback.

“From getting here in May to now where we are today, Reese has come a long way. This offense is a very complicated offense. It takes time to really understand the workings of the offense, and he’s done one heck of a job,” Sadler said. “First, it’s finding his place. It’s hard enough moving to a brand-new situation and trying to find your fit with the locker room, your teammates and everything. And then second, it’s just understanding the offense to be successful.

“For a sophomore, he’s been a very, very quick study. You look at our past with quarterbacks, especially the past six years, we’ve always got that senior starter to come in who’s got all the experience. And Reese, he’s a young, young player. There’s some things we’ve seen that I expected and there’s also some surprises where you go, ‘Oh, wow. OK.’ But he’s still very young in the system. He’s learning and growing. We’re seeing weekly progressions, which is very good.”

Sadler explained that as good a job as Rumfield has done with learning his playbook and also his teammates, he still hasn’t gotten to experience the benefits of Temple's “Q school,” the Wildcats’ all-encompassing offseason training program that prepares their quarterbacks for everything they might see and have to do.

“Where we’ve been spoiled in the past is we’ve got those guys who have been in the system for six years, and we can throw stuff at them and they’ve seen it, heard it, felt it and worked it time and time again,” Sadler said. “With our Q school and meetings and everything else that we do with those guys, when you go through that for years and years, it prepares you for everything that’s going to be coming.

“With Reese it’s a little bit different. He hasn’t been through one of those yet. He got here in May and we were starting spring ball, so he didn’t get the full gamut of Q school. For him to be where he is right now, he’s done a heck of a job. I think with his maturation in his position in our offensive system, you’re just going to see that quarterback development year after year after year. You’ll see a quite different player, I think.”

A full dose of Q school will have to wait until the next offseason for Rumfield, but he’s busy trying to make up for any lost time with copious amounts of film sessions with offensive coordinator Sadler, who helped one-year starting QBs TJ Rumfield, Jared Wiley, Vance Willis and Humberto Arizmendi become highly productive.

“Coach Sadler, he’s such a good coach. I can’t thank him any more,” Reese Rumfield said. “He stays with me and we watch film, shoot, in the morning, after school and this (athletic) period. I look forward to it, because he makes it fun and we make it fun. He wants me to be successful.”

Rumfield said that his cousin TJ – who's now playing professional baseball in the Philadelphia Phillies organization after his standout 2021 season at Virginia Tech – has been a go-to source for learning how to play quarterback for Temple. TJ passed for 3,384 yards and 35 touchdowns for the 10-4 Wildcats in 2017.

“We were just on the phone two days ago. We like to talk about Temple football. He’ll be quizzing me on stuff, and I like that,” Reese said. “Before I actually moved down here (in May), TJ called me and ran through the whole offense with me, and I appreciated that. It’s still basically the same.

“He just told me the role of the QB job here. He was like, ‘If something goes wrong, just keep your head up. You only listen to Coach Sadler and (quarterbacks) Coach (Andrew) Cameron on the sideline. If anyone else tries to tell you something, it goes in one ear and out the other.’”

Rumfield has grown up with the knowledge that his father was, as Reese put it, “a really good athlete.” Standing 6-3, Brock Rumfield passed for 5,009 yards as Belton’s starting quarterback from 1992-93 and was a four-year baseball standout.

A shortstop and pitcher, Rumfield helped power coach David Tidwell’s Tigers to a 35-6 record and the 4A state championship as a senior in 1994. He was the winning pitcher in both state tournament games, shutting out Big Spring in the title game, and was selected 4A state player of the year. He played college baseball at McLennan, Texas and Lubbock Christian before playing pro ball in the Baltimore Orioles system from 1998-99.

“I heard he was a really good athlete,” Reese said about his father. “I know they won state in baseball and I heard he was a good QB. That’s what he’s told me.”

Because Reese is operating the offense and Brock is working as the assistant defensive backs coach, Reese said father and son don’t see each other much during practices.

“The only time I do see him is when we go to 1-on-1s and he’ll come over with us. I don’t even talk to him all practice. I think he likes defense a lot,” Reese said, describing his father as “real supportive” when it comes to dispersing advice.

“He’s been helping me a whole lot. He says that everyone’s looking up to you and how your body language is, that if it’s bad it reflects and that’s how the whole team is going to look. He says, ‘You’ve got to be positive and be a leader. They’re going to go off you.’ That’s the main key.”

As for Stewart, he’s enjoyed having another Rumfield on Temple’s coaching staff this season. Toby Rumfield, TJ’s father, joined Temple’s football program as an assistant coach in 2014 and served as the Wildcats’ head baseball coach from 2016-18 before moving on to coach at Denton.

Also a standout quarterback at Belton, Toby was the Cincinnati Reds’ second-round draft pick in 1991 and reached the Triple-A level with the Atlanta Braves, Chicago White Sox, Miami Marlins and St. Louis Cardinals organizations before he retired as a player in 2004. He was a minor league manager and worked as a scout before becoming a high school coach.

Stewart’s father, former longtime Troy baseball coach Larry Stewart, graduated from Belton in 1965 with Shelby Rumfield, who was a longtime Belton assistant football and baseball coach and the father of Toby and Brock Rumfield. Shelby Rumfield died unexpectedly in March 2019 at age 72.

“He had a lot of impact. He was all about the sports. He loved that stuff,” Reese Rumfield recalled about his grandfather. “He loved Belton. He loved Temple, too.”

Stewart has fond memories of playing baseball with Toby and Brock Rumfield in the Belton youth league.

“Toby was two years older than me and Brock was one year younger, so about every third year I would play with one or the other,” said Stewart, a Troy graduate. “I’d play with Brock for two years and then I’d move up and play with Toby for one, then he’d move up.”

Stewart said Brock Rumfield, who will assist head baseball coach Dallas Robertson next season, brings experience, maturity and his own personality to Temple’s staff.

“Brock played (football) at a high level and he’s coached for 19 years. It’s almost the same personality, but he’s not near as goofy as Toby,” Stewart said. “There’d be times on a Sunday (during the coaches' meetings) when I’d say, ‘All right, everybody’s brain is fried. Let’s stop. Toby, go.’ And he’d start telling us stories about minor league ball and some of the craziest stuff you’ve ever heard. It was always good for a laugh.

“Brock is funny, but it’s kind of that quiet, subtle funny type stuff. Toby walked in and everybody was going to know Toby’s there. It’s a very endearing personality (Brock has). He brings a quiet calm to what could be a chaotic position.”

Speaking of chaotic, Reese Rumfield’s regular-season debut for Temple was the Aug. 27 opener against powerhouse Westlake, winner of two straight 6A state championships. As the sophomore quarterback ran onto the field early in the first quarter, the skies opened up and delivered a brief-but-strong rainstorm, soaking the ball as he tried to throw it against the stubborn defense of the No. 1 Chaparrals.

“That was the worst weather that could have happened. That was not fun,” he recalled.

Facing consistent pressure, Rumfield completed eight of 22 passes for 90 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions as the Wildcats absorbed a mistake-filled 54-13 defeat.

“It was definitely a challenge, but I didn’t even think about it like they were the No. 1 team. I just went into it like it’s another football team and it’s a football game,” Rumfield said. “I was a little nervous right when I stepped out there, but I got way more comfortable (as the game progressed).”

Sadler was impressed by how Rumfield navigated the difficult circumstances.

“We kind of laugh about it now, but you trot out your sophomore quarterback against the No. 3 team in the country that’s got a 6-6 defensive end on one side and a 6-7 defensive end on the other side,” Sadler said. “They’re touted as one of the best defenses in the state, and you’re asking him to go out there and defeat basically Goliath.

“He handled that situation very well. I was very pleased with how he went out there and handled himself and how he kept fighting. He never seemed to get real rattled. He’s handled each one of those situations very well. He’s got a cool, calm demeanor about him. I just like how he carries himself.”

Rumfield notched his first touchdown pass a week later on a short fade to senior wide receiver Devan Williams in the first quarter and added a 67-yard TD strike to senior running back Samari Howard in the second half, but Magnolia West limited him to 86 yards and he threw two interceptions in Temple’s 27-14 loss.

“We did not play bad at all. It was a really good game, but I had two interceptions and I learned from that,” Rumfield said. “I’ve got to know the certain type of windows I’m throwing into and the timing of the routes and that I can’t force anything. The first one where I tried to throw that little quick curl, it was a bad read. Now I can see it, so I feel a lot more comfortable with it.”

Rumfield’s major breakthrough came in Temple’s non-district finale against Hutto two weeks ago. He fired touchdown passes of 52 yards to senior Andre Anderson and 57 and 65 yards to Williams, with the final TD giving the Wildcats a commanding 42-21 lead en route to his 300-yard night and their first victory.

“I’d probably say the second post I had to Devan against Hutto (was the best throw this season). It came right after halftime and we had to put more points on the board,” Rumfield said. “I look up to Devan. He’s a good dude, and we’ve gotten a bond and become way closer. We know we can get it done together.”

Rumfield also commended his linemen, who, like him, are steadily improving after a challenging start this season.

“I couldn’t thank the O-line enough. The last game, oh my, they lit it up,” he said. “I don’t think a defensive player even touched me. I had so much time.”

Both Howard – 12-6A’s Co-MVP last season – and junior wide receiver Mikal Harrison-Pilot have played quarterback in the past and continue to get practice work at QB, so they’re able and willing to give Rumfield pointers to better understand Temple’s attack.

“They’re gravitating toward Reese and they’re trying to help him. Samari is probably his right-hand guy out there, trying to help him with all the protections and play-calls. For Reese to have to memorize all of it in 5 months, it’s tough,” Sadler said. “You’ll watch Mikal in film study talk to him about reads, because he’s gone through Q school. It’s really neat to see them hanging out together and talking football.”

Rumfield listed English as his favorite school subject and described home life as “boring” since his sister and only sibling, Ava, recently moved away to attend Texas Tech, although she is expected to come watch him play at Bryan in the district opener.

Rumfield enjoys watching Dallas Cowboys and Florida Gators games in his spare time and aspires to play football beyond high school. He said football has surpassed baseball as his main sport, though he does plan to play baseball next spring while also practicing with Temple’s track team to try to improve his speed.

For Sadler, the long-range plan for Rumfield is to become as sharp and polished when he’s a senior – and potential third-year starter – as a player such as Cade Klubnik, Westlake’s Clemson-committed senior quarterback.

“That’s the ultimate goal. It would be a great deal to have. We always want that to happen, because you can tell that (Klubnik’s) had that time under center and he’s been coached in those situations. He can easy the line and check into plays that are good situations for them,” Sadler said. “We all expect (Rumfield) to roll out there and be able to do all that stuff. I’m guilty of it, too. (But) we’ve got to understand that he is a sophomore and he’s going to take some lumps and he’s going to continually get better.

“I would dare say that two years from now Reese . . . I’m not going to say he’ll be a completely different kid, because he’s a pretty darn good player right now, but I think he will look like that leader on the field that’s just commanding everything. That’s where I want him to be – to be able to go out there and if a defense does one thing, he can look up and go, ‘No, we’re going to do this,’ and rock and roll.”

Said Stewart: “He’s 16. There’s going to be a natural maturation process, and I just think everything he’s getting right now is going to pay dividends later.”

Rumfield already has come a long way from the 15-year-old freshman who showed up in Temple in early May and was thrown right into the quarterback fray after spring ball had begun.

“It was a little challenging, but I’d just go out there and they’d tell me (what to do) and I’d see if we could execute it. Sometimes we just got a little bit lucky,” Rumfield said. “Thank God I had (the coaches) right behind me.”

Rumfield’s past as an interested observer of Temple football collided with his present as a key Wildcats player when he recently visited with his cousin Zach, the former standout tight end.

“He was over at our house and was talking to me about Temple football and how much fun it is,” Reese said.

Happy to be back home in Bell County, it’s now the sophomore quarterback’s turn to create some great memories of his own.

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