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TAKE IT AWAY NOW: Temple junior middle linebacker Taurean York (5) celebrates with senior cornerback Triston Cohorn (middle) and senior safety Jaden Jackson after York recovered a Hutto fumble during the Wildcats' 60-53 win over the Hippos last Friday at Wildcat Stadium. York has made a team-leading 39 tackles for Temple (1-2), which after its open week will begin defense of its District 12-6A championship against the Bryan Vikings (0-3) at 7:30 p.m. next Friday at Merrill Green Stadium. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


After Temple lost its first two games of this football season, head coach Scott Stewart certainly is glad that his team has a 1-2 record instead of an 0-3 mark. But even if the Wildcats were 3-0 or 2-1 following the conclusion of their non-district schedule, Stewart has thoughts, concerns and goals that go well beyond just a record.

So after Temple made plenty of explosive plays but also several major mistakes in its 60-53 victory over pesky Hutto last Friday night at Wildcat Stadium, Stewart took stock of the Wildcats’ overall situation as they entered their open week in advance of the District 12-6A opener at Bryan (0-3) on Sept. 24.

“I can’t stand not putting the best product that we can put on the field. It’s very important to me, the product that we put on the field. So when it’s not what it should be, that’s the heat I feel,” Stewart said Tuesday, taking a break from watching film of Bryan’s 29-14 loss at Brenham. “Last year against Arlington Martin (in Temple’s 43-25 home loss, its only regular-season defeat), we played our guts out. We didn’t play well at times, but I thought we played well (overall). That’s what you can build on, and you can build on any of it.

“At the end of the day, I’d rather have an ugly win than a pretty loss. But again, are we putting the (desired) product on the field? Obviously you get into this to win football games, but when the product is what you want it to be, a lot of times (winning) takes care of itself.”

None of Temple’s first three games – a mistake-plagued 54-13 home loss to top-ranked powerhouse Austin Westlake (3-0), a 27-14 home defeat against improved Magnolia West (3-0) and then the marathon win over Hutto (1-2) – has any direct impact on whether the Wildcats will earn their ninth consecutive playoff berth or win at least a share of their third straight district championship.

However, what Stewart is emphasizing to his team during its open week is that absorbing all the experiences and lessons – both positive and negative – from the non-district season is a crucial element in Temple playing its best football in the seven district games that will determine whether the Wildcats can maximize their talent and earn an 11th game.

“We got that (0-2 start) off our back, and we also start a second season now (in district play),” said Stewart, whose next win will be his 50th in six seasons as Temple’s head coach. “Now is when it counts for real, so let’s take what we’ve learned and apply what we’ve learned. Let’s tweak the mindset that we had going into Week 1, because now this is a different season. So let’s take it and approach it like it’s a separate season. Once it starts counting, it is what it is.”

Temple’s seven-point win over Hutto was, to use a well-worn sports cliché, not nearly as close as the final score indicated. The game was tied 14-14 after the first quarter, but the Wildcats scored three touchdowns in a 6-minute span in the second period as they built a 35-21 halftime lead. Temple then scored the second half’s first 17 points to seize a commanding 52-21 advantage through three quarters.

After the Wildcats inserted their reserve players on defense, effective Hutto backup quarterback William Hammond threw four touchdown passes in the final 5:04 and two TDs in the final 14 seconds – aided by Temple mishandling a kickoff – to help the Hippos slice the final margin to seven points in a game that lasted 3½ hours.

Despite the Wildcats finally breaking into the win column in their third game, the late-game struggles by their backup defenders left a sour taste in Stewart’s mouth.

“We had two knucklehead busts at the end of the game. (Playing defensive reserves) doesn’t mean we have to bust a coverage. I mean, those kids practice, too,” Stewart said. “If they were better than our 1s, then obviously they wouldn’t be a 2. I know there’s going to be some mismatches there, but cutting somebody loose on the last two touchdown passes were just busted coverages. If we’re not going to be technically sound and schematically sound, then don’t put them out there. We’ve talked about some of those breakdowns.”

Temple’s starting offense didn’t score a touchdown against Westlake’s stubborn defense and produced only two TDs against rugged Magnolia West. However, the Wildcats broke through in a big way against Hutto.

Sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield fired touchdown passes of 52 yards to senior Andre Anderson and 57 yards to senior Devan Williams in the first 3 minutes of the game, staking Temple to a 14-0 lead. Rumfield (13-of-19, 302 yards) also connected with Williams (three catches, 133 yards) on a 65-yard touchdown strike early in the third, giving the first-year starter who transferred to Temple in mid-May five TD passes in the last two games after his difficult debut against two-time defending state champion Westlake.

“Devan Williams is special. I think our receiving corps could be pretty scary if we can stay with what we’re doing there,” Stewart said. “And I’m going to tell you, Reese Rumfield . . . I’ve said it from jump street that the kid’s got all the tools in the world. He saw the game a little differently the other night, and that builds confidence. He can throw the ball. He works hard and it means a lot to him. I guess that comes with being a Rumfield.”

Four years ago, Temple senior TJ Rumfield – Reese’s cousin – passed for 3,384 yards and 35 touchdowns in his only season as the starting quarterback to help the 10-4 Wildcats reach the Class 5A Division I Region III final. Reese’s father, former Belton multi-sport standout Brock Rumfield, is in his first season as a Temple assistant coach.

Against Hutto, the Wildcats also got a 31-yard touchdown run and a 2-point conversion from senior Samari Howard, a 6-yard TD run from junior Mikal Harrison-Pilot, a 52-yard punt return for a TD from senior Tr’Darius Taylor and TD runs of 5 and 4 yards from senior Tavaris Sullivan. Senior kicker Danis Bajric made a 31-yard field goal and seven extra points.

Stewart said he’s been pleased with the improvement and emergence of Temple’s offensive line, whose only returning starter from last year’s 10-2 12-6A championship team is senior left tackle Colby Rice. The other starters are sophomore left guard Endrei Sauls, senior center Jose Faz, junior right guard Agustin Silva and junior right tackle Jeremiah Mungia.

With the strong blocking of senior tight end KeAndre Smith helping the cause, the Wildcats compiled 516 total yards against Hutto – 319 through the air and 197 on the ground.

“I see the O-line getting steadily better. I’ve been pleased with them week to week,” Stewart said. “I thought they kind of held their own against Westlake. I didn’t think we improved greatly against Magnolia West, but we’re starting to try to play a little bit nastier. Faz anchors that and I’ve been pleased with his effort.”

If there’s one thing that frustrated Stewart during the Hutto game, it was Temple’s inconsistency. Rumfield’s back-to-back long touchdown passes to Anderson and Williams – wrapped around a fumble recovery by junior safety Naeten Mitchell – gave the Wildcats a quick 14-0 lead, but that advantage evaporated by the end of the first quarter.

Hippos wide receiver Jairiez Lambert outdueled Temple senior cornerback LeMichael Thompson to make a 45-yard touchdown reception from Grayson Doggett with 1:20 remaining in the opening period, then Hutto forced and recovered a Howard fumble on the Wildcats’ ensuing possession. Hammond came in at quarterback on the quarter’s final play and slashed through a gap in the line before sprinting untouched for a 76-yard touchdown and a 14-14 deadlock.

“That’s kind of the M.O. of our defense right now. We’re not bad; I just think we’ve got to find ourselves,” Stewart said. “That’s going to be a big emphasis this week, is playing with confidence.”

That sequence of events left Stewart searching for one thing that’s been elusive.

“Consistency. That’s something you look at year in and year out, week in and week out,” he said. “When you see (the defense allowing) big plays, that’s (a matter of) kids understanding schematics and usually there’s a breakdown.

“That first touchdown Hutto had on that long pass, LeMichael was in great position. I mean, (Lambert) made an unbelievable play. It was pretty good coverage and it was just a really good ball and a really good play by the receiver. So we’ve got to finish that play, and that’s what we talked about. The long run by the quarterback, we just completely misfit that. That’s where the consistency has to increase.”

Stewart had special praise for the Wildcats’ group of receivers, particularly their work as blockers. Anderson hadn’t caught a pass through two games, but on Temple’s third offensive snap against Hutto the senior alertly snared a Rumfield pass that sailed through Smith’s hands and raced in for a 52-yard touchdown. Seven Wildcats caught at least one pass.

“Andre took advantage of an opportunity. That kid was in the right place at the right time and took advantage of a ‘lucky’ situation. He works his absolute tail off, so it’s great to see that,” Stewart said. “(Senior receiver) Nyles Moreland did a good job. It would be nice to keep fresh legs out there all the time, because in this offense we’re going to try to establish the run.

“We’ve got a sign in the receivers’ (meeting) room that says, ‘No block, no rock.’ That’s the mantra they try to carry with them: ‘Look, we’re going to be nasty when we’re blocking, too. We’re going to go after the ball when it’s in the air, but we’re also going to go after you when the ball’s not in the air.’”

Temple’s fatigued defense had to play 91 and 86 plays, respectively, in the first two games, and that amount of wear and tear was evident during last week's workouts.

“At one point we had five starters out during practice,” Stewart said, mentioning senior defensive end Eric Shorter, senior defensive tackle Tommy Torres, junior middle linebacker Taurean York, safety/receiver Harrison-Pilot (five catches, 70 yards vs. Hutto) and sophomore defensive tackle Ayden Brown.

The 16-year-old York leads all area 6A players with 39 tackles, but his coach said the three-year starter and reigning 12-6A Defensive MVP wasn’t exactly in peak physical form after battling Magnolia West’s hard-running offense.

“Last Tuesday he looked like an old man walking around,” Stewart joked.

With Temple not beginning its district schedule until next Friday night at Bryan’s Merrill Green Stadium, Stewart said the Wildcats’ practices this week have had a back-to-basics, no-nonsense approach.

“We’re just going back to fundamentals. In this game there’s a bunch of different schemes and a bunch of stuff you can do, but on defense it boils down to block destruction, tackle and cover, and on offense it’s about blocking, running throwing and catching,” he said. “So we’re organizing practice where we’re going to bang on each other and continue to practice a physical style. We’ll be smart, because we’ve got quite a few kids maybe not out but banged up. We don’t need to be slinging people around.

“We’ll just focus on physicality. We’ll lift weights a little bit differently. We’ll go offense vs. defense on several drills, just working on game speed. We need to practice full speed and we need to see full speed."

And as always in Temple’s program, consistent competition remains vital.

“I think anything can be won or lost. I mean, production rules the world. I want there to be a battle at every position every day,” Stewart said. “If you come out and outwardly say that the competition’s over, you’re not going to get as much out of the guy that won it and you’re not going to get as much out of the guy who’s backing him up.

“Not to beat a dead horse, but you can be a 2 on the depth chart and have a five-star mindset. And the 1s, we’ve had some kids get fussy because they miss a practice and come back and have to run with the 2s. Well, a guy with a one-star mindset is going to act like somebody owes him something. Go earn it back.”

A Temple team that hung 60 points on Hutto now prepares to take on a Bryan squad that’s scored only 14 points in each of its first three games. Junior starting QB Malcom Gooden suffered a serious leg injury as the Vikings of veteran head coach Ross Rogers lost their opener 44-14 to Lucas Lovejoy.

“I think Bryan’s still kind of finding themselves and what they can do. Their quarterback, who’s a heck of an athlete, I guess he broke his leg in the Lovejoy game,” Stewart said. “They are stupid good on defense. They’re big and they’ve got everybody back.

“They’re going into the off week with the premise that this restart gives you a fresh start and you get a chance to fix everything that’s not going well. I know they play our ever-loving butts off down there.”

For Temple, the duel at Bryan kicks off a seven-game 12-6A grind that features the Wildcats’ Oct. 1 home clash with Harker Heights (3-0), which has outscored opponents 169-70 and led Temple 20-0 last year in Killeen before the Wildcats charged back and prevailed 38-36.

“Apparently there’s some pretty good football teams (in 12-6A). Harker Heights is apparently scary. Shoemaker’s always going to be athletic,” Stewart said. “Killeen’s lighting it up. Ellison’s just stoning people. Belton’s huge. There’s a lot of parity. It’s been like that since we got back into this (6A) district."

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BREAK ON THROUGH: Temple senior running back Tavaris Sullivan fights past a Hutto defender to score the first of his two touchdown runs during the Wildcats' 60-53 win over the Hippos last Friday night at Wildcat Stadium. After its open date this week, defending league champion Temple (1-2) will begin its seven-game District 12-6A schedule at Bryan (0-3) on Sept. 24. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)




CLASS 6A


TEAM STATISTICS


OFFENSE

Total yards gained/

average per game

Killeen Shoemaker 1,036/518.0 (808 rushing, 228 passing)

Harker Heights 1,482/494.0 (946 rushing, 536 passing)

Killeen 1,221/407.0 (605 rushing, 616 passing)

Copperas Cove 1,102/367.3 (722 rushing, 380 passing)

Temple 1,067/355.7 (539 rushing, 528 passing)

Killeen Ellison 760/253.3 (331 rushing, 429 passing)

Belton 729/243.0 (276 rushing, 453 passing)


DEFENSE

Total yards allowed/

average per game

Killeen 747/249.0 (362 rushing, 385 passing)

Killeen Shoemaker 516/258.0 (112 rushing, 404 passing)

Killeen Ellison 813/271.0 (418 rushing, 395 passing)

Belton 877/292.3 (508 rushing, 369 passing)

Harker Heights 1,063/354.3 (442 rushing, 621 passing)

Temple 1,364/454.7 (617 rushing, 621 passing)

Copperas Cove 1,597/532.3 (854 rushing, 743 passing)


INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS


OFFENSE

RUSHING

(carries, yards, touchdowns)

Re’Shaun Sanford II, Harker Heights 48 524 6

Samari Howard, Temple 58 371 1

Craig Brown, Copperas Cove 51 335 1

Emory Arthur, Killeen 31 249 3

Jerrod Hicks, Killeen Shoemaker 12 245 4

Jamarius Stewart, Killeen Shoemaker 22 220 1

Khamari McClain, Killeen Ellison 35 210 0

Aimeer Washington, Harker Heights 29 188 0

Marcus Moultrie, Harker Heights 29 156 1

Malcom Roberts, Copperas Cove 26 154 6

Omari Evans, Killeen Shoemaker 26 143 0

Slade LeBlanc, Belton 30 117 1

Jalen Robinson, Temple 5 98 1

LJ Underwood, Belton 14 92 1

Joseph McCray, Killeen Shoemaker 6 88 0

Peydon Horace, Killeen Shoemaker 18 86 3

Javier Luna, Belton 16 63 0

Tavaris Sullivan, Temple 7 43 2

Elijah Warner, Belton 18 42 0

Kyle Micka, Killeen Ellison 19 42 0

Kaleb Sims, Killeen Ellison 17 42 1

Bobby Williams, Killeen Ellison 3 41 0

Dylan Plake, Harker Heights 4 36 1

Reese Rumfield, Temple 8 24 0

Kamari Terrell, Killeen Shoemaker 2 17 0

Terrance Carter, Harker Heights 2 8 2

Xavier Cortes, Killeen Ellison 5 -1 0

Emory Watson, Killeen Ellison 1 -1 0

Kason Sims, Killeen Ellison 1 -2 0

Ty Brown, Belton 9 -38 0


PASSING

(completions-attempts-interceptions,

yards, touchdowns)

Roderick Norman, Killeen 34-71-3 550 2

Dylan Plake, Harker Heights 27-37-2 536 8

Reese Rumfield, Temple 26-54-2 478 5

Ty Brown, Belton 37-67-4 427 4

Shane Richey, Copperas Cove 26-59-2 377 1

Kason Sims, Killeen Ellison 31-58-3 429 3

Omari Evans, Killeen Shoemaker 15-34-3 228 2

Samari Howard, Temple 1-3-0 33 0

Slade LeBlanc, Belton 4-8-0 26 0

Kaleb Hill, Temple 1-2-0 17 0


RECEIVING

(receptions, yards, touchdowns)

Marcus Maple, Harker Heights 11 253 3

Seth Morgan, Belton 16 212 2

Devan Williams, Temple 6 177 3

Bobby Williams II, Killeen Ellison 6 144 1

Zy’Aire King, Killeen Ellison 8 128 1

Bryan “Itty” Henry, Belton 9 126 2

Re’Shaun Sanford II, Harker Heights 7 122 2

Tr’Darius Taylor, Temple 5 92 0

Dantrell Sterling, Killeen Ellison 10 89 1

Samari Howard, Temple 7 79 1

Mikal Harrison-Pilot, Temple 5 70 0

Kamari Terrell, Killeen Shoemaker 1 59 1

Terrance Carter, Harker Heights 3 54 1

Andre Anderson, Temple 1 52 1

Tekoree Landours, Killeen Ellison 7 50 0

Alexander Bailey, Harker Heights 1 46 1

Terrance King, Killeen Shoemaker 4 43 0

Angel Guerrero, Belton 1 39 0

KeAndre Smith, Temple 2 37 0

Jamarius Stewart, Killeen Shoemaker 4 30 1

Kobe Smith, Temple 2 21 0

LJ Underwood, Belton 2 16 0

Mason Ramm, Belton 5 15 0

Garrett Oliveira, Belton 3 14 0

Javier Luna, Belton 1 10 0

Kyle Micka, Killeen Ellison 1 10 0

Elijah Warner, Belton 2 8 0

Javante Carson, Killeen Shoemaker 1 8 0

Mason Munz, Belton 1 7 0

Anthony Millender, Harker Heights 1 6 0

Breon Williams, Killeen Ellison 1 2 0


SCORING

(touchdowns/2-point conversions/

field goals/extra points)

Re’Shaun Sanford II, Harker Heights 54 points (9/0/0/0)

Malcom Roberts, Copperas Cove 36 points (6/0/0/0)

Terrance Carter, Harker Heights 32 points (5/1/0/0)

Bra’Dyn Brooks-Smith, Copperas Cove 24 points (4/0/0/0)

Jerrod Hicks, Killeen Shoemaker 24 points (4/0/0/0)

Jai’den Fletcher, Harker Heights 21 points (0/0/0/21)

Marcus Maple, Harker Heights 20 points (3/1/0/0)

Danis Bajric, Temple 19 points (0/0/3/10)

Devan Williams, Temple 18 points (3/0/0/0)

Emory Arthur, Killeen 18 points (3/0/0/0)

Peydon Horace, Killeen Shoemaker 18 points (3/0/0/0)

Samari Howard, Temple 14 points (2/1/0/0)

Antonio Butler, Killeen Shoemaker 14 points (0/0/1/11)

Tavaris Sullivan, Temple 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Bryan “Itty” Henry, Belton 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Seth Morgan, Belton 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Jamarius Stewart, Killeen Shoemaker 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Kamari Terrell, Killeen Shoemaker 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Zach White, Belton 7 points (0/0/0/7)

Noriel Gomez, Killeen 7 points (0/0/1/4)

Andre Anderson, Temple 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Mikal Harrison-Pilot, Temple 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Jalen Robinson, Temple 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Tr’Darius Taylor, Temple 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Kage Carmichael, Belton 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Slade LeBlanc, Belton 6 points (1/0/0/0)

LJ Underwood, Belton 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Craig Brown, Copperas Cove 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Blaine Butler, Copperas Cove 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Trishstin Glass, Copperas Cove 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Shane Richey, Copperas Cove 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Alexander Bailey, Harker Heights 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Marcus Moultrie, Harker Heights 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Dylan Plake, Harker Heights 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Zy’Aire King, Killeen Ellison 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Kaleb Sims, Killeen Ellison 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Dantrell Sterling, Killeen Ellison 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Devonte Tezino, Killeen Ellison 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Bobby Williams II, Killeen Ellison 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Kendric Steward, Copperas Cove 5 points (0/0/0/5)

Carlos DeJesus, Killeen Ellison 4 points (0/0/0/4)

Thomas Martinez, Copperas Cove 3 points (0/0/0/3)


DEFENSE

Tackles

(minimum: 8)

Taurean York, Temple 39

Matthew Moore, Killeen Ellison 36

Calvin Harper, Killeen Ellison 27

Donovan Thompson, Belton 25

Aaron Bain, Belton 23

Steve Albert, Killeen Ellison 21

Wriley Madden, Belton 19

Jeremy Jennings, Harker Heights 19

R’jai Rogers, Harker Heights 19

Tyree Trammell, Harker Heights 19

Jaden Jackson, Temple 18

Kage Carmichael, Belton 18

LeMichael Thompson, Temple 17

Taylor Evans, Belton 17

Braxton Haynes, Belton 16

Elijah Armour, Killeen Ellison 16

Elijah Harris, Killeen Ellison 16

Kobe Burgess, Killeen Shoemaker 16

Naeten Mitchell, Temple 15

Connor Whitman, Belton 15

Brendan Bett, Killeen Ellison 15

Xovion Davis-Alexander, Killeen Ellison 15

Tyrone Osberry, Killeen Ellison 15

Faylin Lee, Temple 13

Tommy Torres, Temple 13

Jamorion Stanford, Harker Heights 13

Kalel Maye, Killeen Shoemaker 13

Samuel Babcock, Belton 12

Treyvione Searcy, Harker Heights 12

Isaiah Hagan, Killeen Ellison 12

Mikal Harrison-Pilot, Temple 11

Eric Shorter, Temple 11

Tanner Conroy, Belton 11

Trent West, Belton 11

Chandler Gastelo, Copperas Cove 11

Kevin Pontious, Copperas Cove 11

Devonte Tezino, Killeen Ellison 11

Ezra Davidson, Harker Heights 10

Dominick McCarty, Killeen Shoemaker 10

Ayden Brown, Temple 9

Sam Ramirez, Belton 9

Evan Collazo, Harker Heights 9

Deaubry Hood, Harker Heights 9

Joseph James, Killeen Ellison 9

Michael Alexander, Killeen Shoemaker 9

Tayvon McManemy, Copperas Cove 8

Jacoby Frazier, Copperas Cove 8

Christopher Robinson, Harker Heights 8

Darrion Burleson, Killeen Shoemaker 8

Ronnie Collins, Killeen Shoemaker 8

Davante Mitchell, Killeen Shoemaker 8


Interceptions

Connor Whitman, Belton 2

Kamari Terrell, Killeen Shoemaker 2

Deaubry Hood, Harker Heights 2

Naeten Mitchell, Temple 1

Aaron Bain, Belton 1

Kage Carmichael, Belton 1

Jacoby Frazier, Copperas Cove 1

Jeremy Jennings, Harker Heights 1

Devin Nervis, Harker Heights 1

Jamorion Stanford, Harker Heights 1


CLASS 4A AND UNDER/OTHERS


TEAM STATISTICS


OFFENSE

Total yards gained/

average per game

Rosebud-Lott 1,735/578.3 (602 rushing, 1,133 passing)

Lampasas 1,517/505.7 (681 rushing, 836 passing)

Lake Belton 1,284/428.0 (564 rushing, 720 passing)

Salado 1,205/401.7 (954 rushing, 251 passing)

Academy 1,186/395.3 (476 rushing, 710 passing)

Rogers 1,170/390.0 (799 rushing, 371 passing)

Rockdale 1,042/347.3 (273 rushing, 327 passing)

Jarrell 979/326.3 (522 rushing, 457 passing)

Cameron Yoe 903/301.0 (351 rushing, 552 passing)

Troy 738/246.0 (463 rushing, 275 passing)


DEFENSE

Total yards allowed/

average per game

Academy 694/231.3 (442 rushing, 252 passing)

Lake Belton 961/320.3 (521 rushing, 440 passing)

Salado 984/328.0 (197 rushing, 787 passing)

Rogers 1,016/338.7.5 (336 rushing, 680 passing)


INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS


RUSHING

(carries, yards, touchdowns)

Derrick Warren Jr., Jarrell 52 474 9

Case Brister, Lampasas 52 403 3

Christian Riley, Rogers 29 329 3

Aidan Wilson, Salado 52 325 1

Chad Pate, Bruceville-Eddy 55 275 0

Caden Strickland, Salado 46 268 4

Phaibian Bynaum, Cameron Yoe 45 254 3

Blaydn Barcak, Rockdale 43 251 4

Seth Reavis, Salado 26 240 2

D’Arius Wilkerson, Lake Belton 36 222 4

Steve Jackson, Troy 26 204 2

Zane Clark, Academy 36 181 2

Colby Tolbert, Bruceville-Eddy 29 160 3

Brayden Bartlett, Academy 28 157 0

Riley Dolgener, Rogers 31 151 3

Connor Crews, Lake Belton 31 144 3

Zane Zeinert, Rosebud-Lott 10 121 2

Korey Gibson, Troy 36 121 1

Ethan Moreno, Lampasas 14 114 1

Kobe Mitchell, Rockdale 13 88 1

Ivan Lopez, Rogers 15 85 4

Cooper Valle, Troy 22 83 0

Daxton Brookreson, Lampasas 12 77 1

Karsen Gomez, Rogers 8 73 1

Garrett Wolfe, Rogers 14 71 1

Kasey Mraz, Academy 19 69 0

Zach Davis, Rogers 11 68 0

Tristan Robin, Lake Belton 10 63 1

Daniel Hardin, Lake Belton 11 62 0

Cannon Negron, Troy 5 60 0

Micah Hudson, Lake Belton 7 51 0

Nicholas Boaz, Bruceville-Eddy 12 50 1

Davioun Scott, Rockdale 13 48 0

Darion Franklin, Academy 5 45 2

Hutton Haire, Salado 16 45 3

Ryan Muniz, Cameron Yoe 17 39 1

Kason Goolsby, Cameron Yoe 4 37 0

Adam Benavides, Salado 2 26 0

Dusty Rhiddlehoover, Salado 4 25 0

Ashtin Fontz, Troy 5 22 0

Monte Whitfield, Lake Belton 4 20 0

Fabian Salomon, Cameron Yoe 2 19 1

Drew Bird, Salado 1 19 0

Jamarri Price, Jarrell 1 18 0

Chris Huff, Rockdale 4 18 0

Alex Lawton, Academy 4 16 0

Robert Owens, Rockdale 2 16 0

Keshon Johnson, Cameron Yoe 6 12 0

Bryan Thuy, Rogers 4 12 0

Brayden Bolyard, Jarrell 3 11 0

Dathan Walker, Jarrell 1 10 0

Braeden Vrabel, Jarrell 2 9 0

Cartier Neely, Academy 2 6 0

Pharrell Hemphill, Cameron Yoe 4 6 0

Jaidyn Sanchez, Cameron Yoe 1 6 0

Ian Ranly, Rogers 2 6 0

Nolan Miller, Salado 1 6 0

Tyrrell Horne, Bruceville-Eddy 1 5 0

Cameron Hamilton, Lake Belton 2 4 0

Bryce Owens, Bruceville-Eddy 1 3 0

Hunter Diaz, Bruceville-Eddy 5 3 0

Adam Caddell, Academy 1 2 1

Jordan Commander, Bruceville-Eddy 1 1 0

Malik Davis, Jarrell 1 0 0

Joshua Carter, Lampasas 1 0 0

RJ Cook, Rogers 3 0 0

Zjellon Thomas, Lake Belton 1 -2 0

Kemar Spencer, Rockdale 4 -3 0

Zakori Yanes, Rockdale 2 -5 0

Chad David, Rockdale 1 -9 0

Kadin Workman, Troy 11 -7 0

Jace Carr, Troy. 18 -20 1

Braylan Drake, Cameron Yoe 2 -22 0


PASSING

(completions-attempts-interceptions,

yards, touchdowns)

Zane Zeinert, Rosebud-Lott 62-97-1 1,108 10

Dylan Sanchez, Lampasas 55-84-1 836 13

Connor Crews, Lake Belton 53-82-3 720 4

Kasey Mraz, Academy 33-48-1 658 9

Blaydn Barcak, Rockdale 34-50-1 620 6

Andrew Knebel, Jarrell 35-71-2 603 8

Ryan Muniz, Cameron Yoe 43-72-5 531 6

Riley Dolgener, Rogers 20-36-0 347 4

Jace Carr, Troy 22-39-1 275 2

Hutton Haire, Salado 12-23-0 251 4

Colby Tolbert, Bruceville-Eddy 5-28-2 112 1

Alex Lawton, Academy 4-5-0 52 1

Julian Reyna, Rosebud-Lott 3-3-0 25 1

Christian Riley, Rogers 1-1-0 24 1

Braylan Drake, Cameron Yoe 4-9-0 21 0

Kobe Mitchell, Rockdale 1-2-1 18 1

Ashton Rosas, Bruceville-Eddy 0-1-1 0 0

Braeden Vrabel, Jarrell 1-1-0 -1 0


RECEIVING

(receptions, yards, touchdowns)

Scout Brazeal, Academy 16 406 4

Robert Owens, Rockdale 14 359 4

Ethan Moreno, Lampasas 20 347 5

Nate Borchardt, Lampasas 23 346 4

Micah Hudson, Lake Belton 23 345 2

Daud Khan, Lake Belton 11 206 1

Darion Franklin, Academy 11 179 5

Trayjen Wilcox, Cameron Yoe 8 144 2

Seth Reavis, Salado 8 142 2

Wyatt Windham, Rockdale 9 136 1

Kobe Mitchell, Rockdale 5 114 1

Zach Davis, Rogers 2 114 1

Phaibian Bynaum, Cameron Yoe 6 109 1

Jaidyn Sanchez, Cameron Yoe 12 104 0

Kason Goolsby, Cameron Yoe 11 98 1

Pharrell Hemphill, Cameron Yoe 8 81 2

Jordan Werner, Rogers 3 80 3

Javeon Wilcox, Lake Belton 3 64 1

Caden Strickland, Salado 3 64 1

Case Brister, Lampasas 3 62 2

Christopher Bailey, Bruceville-Eddy 1 60 1

Blake Bundy, Academy 2 58 1

Kadin Workman, Troy 4 55 0

Christian Riley, Rogers 3 54 0

Blake Hoelscher, Rogers 5 49 1

Josh Huckabee, Salado 1 45 1

Tyrrell Horne, Bruceville-Eddy 2 44 0

Steve Jackson, Troy 2 41 0

Peyton London, Troy 4 40 0

Alex Vargas, Rogers 5 39 0

John Stubblefield, Troy 4 39 0

Zane Clark, Academy 5 37 0

Connor Vybiral, Lake Belton 3 34 0

Connor Bartz, Lake Belton 6 29 0

Landon Richardson, Lampasas 2 29 0

Jackson Landeros, Rogers 1 27 0

Ty Legg, Lake Belton 1 26 0

Joshua Carter, Lampasas 1 26 1

Aden Rascoe, Lampasas 3 24 0

Ashton Farrell, Troy 2 24 1

Alex Lawton, Academy 2 22 0

Cooper Valle, Troy 2 18 0

Korey Gibson, Troy 1 17 0

Quori Hardman, Cameron Yoe 2 16 0

Jaydon Leza, Lake Belton 2 15 0

Triston Almanza, Troy 1 12 0

Gerren Marrero, Rockdale 6 11 0

Joel Ramos, Troy 1 10 0

Luke Tomasek, Academy 1 8 0

Elijah Jarmon, Bruceville-Eddy 1 8 0

Daxton Brookreson, Lampasas 1 7 0

D’Arius Wilkerson, Lake Belton 1 2 0

Owen Stubbs, Lampasas 1 2 1

Brody Butler, Bruceville-Eddy 1 0 0

Kade Sebek, Rogers 1 0 0

Dylan Sanchez, Lampasas 1 -7 0


SCORING

(touchdowns/2-point conversions/

field goals/extra points)

Derrick Warren Jr., Jarrell 72 points (12/0/0/0)

Darion Franklin, Academy 42 points (7/0/0/0)

Ethan Moreno, Lampasas 36 points (6/0/0/0)

Blaydn Barcak, Rockdale 32 points (5/1/0/0)

Blake Bundy, Academy 30 points (1/0/3/15)

Case Brister, Lampasas 30 points (5/0/0/0)

Robert Owens, Rockdale 30 points (5/0/0/0)

Jamarquis Johnson, Rosebud-Lott 30 points (6/0/0/0)

Caden Strickland, Salado 30 points (5/0/0/0)

Phaibian Bynaum, Cameron Yoe 26 points (4/1/0/0)

Ivan Lopez, Rogers 26 points (4/1/0/0)

Scout Brazeal, Academy 24 points (4/0/0/0)

D’Arius Wilkerson, Lake Belton 24 points (4/0/0/0)

Nate Borchardt, Lampasas 24 points (4/0/0/0)

Landon Richardson, Lampasas 24 points (0/0/2/18)

Jordan Landrum, Rosebud-Lott 24 points (4/0/0/0)

Seth Reavis, Salado 24 points (4/0/0/0)

Riley Dolgener, Rogers 22 points (3/2/0/0)

Christian Riley, Rogers 20 points (3/1/0/0)

Colby Tolbert, Bruceville-Eddy 18 points (3/0/0/0)

Connor Crews, Lake Belton 18 points (3/0/0/0)

Jordan Werner, Rogers 18 points (3/0/0/0)

Breon Lewis, Rosebud-Lott 18 points (3/0/0/0)

Hutton Haire, Salado 18 points (3/0/0/0)

Cole Jackson, Lake Belton 16 points (0/0/1/13)

Cayden Sanchez, Jarrell 14 points (0/0/0/14)

Daniel Romero, Rockdale 14 points (0/0/0/14)

Zane Clark, Academy 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Pharrell Hemphill, Cameron Yoe 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Trayjen Wilcox, Cameron Yoe 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Jalani Price, Jarrell 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Micah Hudson, Lake Belton 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Kobe Mitchell, Rockdale 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Wyatt Windham, Rockdale 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Baldemar Arzola, Rogers 12 points (0/0/1/9)

Easton Fulton, Rosebud-Lott 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Zane Zeinert, Rosebud-Lott 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Steve Jackson, Troy 12 points (2/0/0/0)

Tyler McKissick, Troy 12 points (0/0/2/6)

Jesse Martinez, Cameron Yoe 10 points (0/0/1/7)

Morgan Adams, Salado 8 points (0/0/0/8)

Adam Caddell, Academy 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Christopher Bailey, Bruceville-Eddy 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Nicholas Boaz, Bruceville-Eddy 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Kason Goolsby, Cameron Yoe 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Ryan Muniz, Cameron Yoe 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Fabian Salomon, Cameron Yoe 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Isiah Fundenberg, Jarrell 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Fisher Kamari, Jarrell 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Jamarri Price, Jarrell 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Matthew Teinert, Jarrell 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Manuel Herrera, Lake Belton 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Daud Khan, Lake Belton 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Tristan Robin, Lake Belton 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Javeon Wilcox, Lake Belton 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Daxton Brookreson, Lampasas 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Joshua Carter, Lampasas 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Owen Stubbs, Lampasas 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Gerren Marrero, Rockdale 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Zach Davis, Rogers 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Karsen Gomez, Rogers 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Blake Hoelscher, Rogers 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Garrett Wolfe, Rogers 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Clayton Doskocil, Rosebud-Lott 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Kyle Finan, Rosebud-Lott 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Moses Fox, Rosebud-Lott 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Julian Reyna, Rosebud-Lott 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Josh Huckabee, Salado 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Nolan Miller, Salado 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Aidan Wilson, Salado 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Jace Carr, Troy 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Ashton Farrell, Troy 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Korey Gibson, Troy 6 points (1/0/0/0)

Landen Greene, Cameron Yoe 4 points (0/0/1/1)

Drew Bird, Salado 4 points (0/0/0/4)

Daniel Chtay, Salado 3 points (0/0/0/3)

Jaidyn Sanchez, Cameron Yoe 2 points (0/1/0/0)

Cruz San Migel, Rockdale 2 points (0/1/0/0)


DEFENSE

Tackles

(minimum: 8)

Cruz San Migel, Rockdale 54

Fabian Salomon, Cameron Yoe 43

Javeon Wilcox, Lake Belton 37

Daxton Brookreson, Lampasas 36

Nic Bates, Salado 33

Lane Ward, Academy 31

Josh Huckabee, Salado 31

Colton Barbo, Cameron Yoe 30

Case Brister, Lampasas 30

Ricky Aguilar, Moody 30

Nolan Miller, Salado 30

Braydon Sumners, Salado 29

Jamarri Price, Jarrell 28

Scout Brazeal, Academy 26

Korey Gibson, Troy 25

Quori Hardman, Cameron Yoe 24

Bruce Onchweri, Lake Belton 24

Isaiah Sauls, Rockdale 23

Clayton Lawson, Academy 22

Connor Brennan, Lake Belton 22

Kaeson Raub, Lampasas 22

Wyatt Windham, Rockdale 22

Landen Greene, Cameron Yoe 21

Scott Penny, Rockdale 21

Blake Bundy, Academy 20

Malik Davis, Jarrell 20

Joshua Carter, Lampasas 20

Hunter Mach, Moody 20

Kadin Workman, Troy 20

Colby Tolbert, Bruceville-Eddy 19

Garrett Combs, Salado 19

Darion Franklin, Academy 18

John Tomasek, Academy 18

Chad David, Rockdale 18

Robert Owens, Rockdale 18

Jakson Hughes, Rosebud-Lott 18

John Paul Reyna, Rosebud-Lott 18

Armando Reyes, Cameron Yoe 17

Peanut Brazzle, Lake Belton 17

Cooper Staton, Moody 17

Chris Huff, Rockdale 17

Steve Jackson, Troy 17

Ty Legg, Lake Belton 16

Adrian Torrez, Lampasas 16

Tristan Galvan, Rockdale 16

Brice Lisenbe, Rogers 16

Kyle Finan, Rosebud-Lott 16

Nolan Kahlig, Rosebud-Lott 16

Elijah Sunderman, Troy 16

Sosa Sokimi, Lampasas 15

Jordan Werner, Rogers 15

Cole Stewart, Academy 14

Dominick Rangel, Cameron Yoe 14

Carlos Salomon, Cameron Yoe 14

Nathaniel Bratton, Lake Belton 14

Landon Richardson, Lampasas 14

Davis Orr, Moody 14

Jackson Landeros, Rogers 14

Isaac Pettigrew, Salado 14

Dusty Rhiddlehoover, Salado 14

Nicholas Boaz, Bruceville-Eddy 13

Cody Webb, Cameron Yoe 13

Jesus Valle, Jarrell 13

Kyle Dalton, Lake Belton 13

Isaiah Koonce, Lake Belton 13

Moses Fox, Rosebud-Lott 13

Caden Berry, Academy 12

Manuel Herrera, Lake Belton 12

Cade Pantaleon, Rockdale 12

Julian Reyna, Rosebud-Lott 12

Jake Windham, Salado 12

Tres Conlon, Troy 12

Andrew Mitchell, Troy 12

Brayden Bolyard, Jarrell 11

Landon DiBattiste, Lampasas 11

Conner Keele, Lampasas 11

Steven De La Mora, Troy 11

Peyton London, Troy 11

Jake Jones, Academy 10

Colby Arney, Cameron Yoe 10

Hunter Hux, Cameron Yoe 10

Selman Bridges, Lake Belton 10

Levi Rivera, Lampasas 10

Keith Dailey, Moody 10

Landon Pounders, Rockdale 10

Zakori Yanes, Rockdale 10

Easton Fulton, Rosebud-Lott 10

Daniel Rodriguez, Rosebud-Lott 10

Alex Lawton, Academy 9

Ryder Casqueira, Bruceville-Eddy 9

Brandon Bell, Lake Belton 9

Gerren Marrero, Rockdale 9

Zach Davis, Rogers 9

Jordan Landrum, Rosebud-Lott 9

Ashton Rosas, Bruceville-Eddy 8

Daniel Farr, Jarrell 8

Emerson Kirby, Jarrell 8

Ethan Martone, Jarrell 8

Jalani Price, Jarrell 8

Dathan Walker, Jarrell 8

Evan Roland, Lake Belton 8

Ethan Moreno, Lampasas 8

Luke Smith, Lampasas 8

Paxton Jackson, Moody 8

Tyler Shelton, Rogers 8

Clayton Doskocil, Rosebud-Lott 8

Breon Lewis, Rosebud-Lott 8

Blake Volk, Salado 8


INTERCEPTIONS

Ashton Rosas, Bruceville-Eddy 2

Jalani Price, Jarrell 2

Gerren Marrero, Rockdale 2

Scout Brazeal, Academy 1

Alex Lawton, Academy 1

Braylan Drake, Cameron Yoe 1

Dakarai Barnes, Jarrell 1

Brayden Bolyard, Jarrell 1

Fisher Kamari, Jarrell 1

Peanut Brazzle, Lake Belton 1

Selman Bridges, Lake Belton 1

Manuel Herrera, Lake Belton 1

Tristan Galvan, Rockdale 1

Davioun Scott, Rockdale 1

Jackson Landeros, Rogers 1

Alex Vargas, Rogers 1

Jordan Werner, Rogers 1

Moses Fox, Rosebud-Lott 1

Jamarquis Johnson, Rosebud-Lott 1

Jordan Landrum, Rosebud-Lott 1

Breon Lewis, Rosebud-Lott 1

Daniel Rodriguez, Rosebud-Lott 1

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CELEBRATE GOOD TIMES: Temple senior wide receiver Devan Williams (1) is congratulated by teammates after catching a 57-yard touchdown pass from sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield (10) 3 minutes into the first quarter of the Wildcats' 60-53 win over Hutto on Friday night at Wildcat Stadium. Rumfield connected with Williams for a 65-yard score in the third period and threw three TDs overall against the Hippos, including a 52-yarder to Andre Anderson. Temple finished 1-2 in non-district play and after an open date will begin defense of its District 12-6A championship at Bryan (0-3) on Sept. 24. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


The Temple Wildcats didn’t make many of their own breaks or have many bounces go their way in the football season’s first two games, frustrating home losses to Austin Westlake and Magnolia West by a combined 54 points.

But just more than a minute into Friday night’s non-district finale against Hutto at Wildcat Stadium, Temple got an inkling that its fortunes finally were changing for the better.

Wildcats sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield fired a pass over the middle to slanting senior tight end KeAndre Smith. The ball glanced off of Smith’s hands but kept going directly into those of senior receiver Andre Anderson, who caught it in stride and sprinted in for a 52-yard touchdown with only 1:20 gone.

Temple then stripped the ball away from Hippos running back Jalon Banks and junior safety Naeten Mitchell recovered it before Rumfield connected with senior receiver Devan Williams for a 57-yard touchdown pass and a 14-0 lead less than 3 minutes into the game.

The fast-starting Wildcats eventually led 35-21 at halftime and expanded the advantage to 52-21 in the third quarter before Hutto produced five fourth-quarter touchdowns – two in the final 14 seconds against reserve defenders – to make the final margin respectable in a 60-53 Temple victory that lasted 3½ hours and revived some of the Wildcats’ past swagger.

“We definitely got our juice back. We were actually playing Temple Wildcat football tonight,” said Temple senior running back Samari Howard, the reigning District 12-6A Co-MVP who rushed for 138 yards with a 31-yard touchdown, ran in a 2-point conversion and tackled Hutto’s punter for an 18-yard loss. “We kind of got away from that the first two weeks, but we regrouped, got in the film room, got in the weight room and just grinded it out.”

Said Temple sixth-year head coach Scott Stewart: “I told them, ‘At some point the top’s going to blow off and it’s going to be fun to watch,’ and that was pretty fun to watch and it was pretty fun to coach tonight.”

After Temple made far too many mistakes while getting outplayed and worn down by Westlake and Magnolia West, the Wildcats (1-2) delivered a strong all-around performance through three quarters against Hutto (1-2) to give them a much-needed jolt going into their open week before they begin their seven-game 12-6A schedule Sept. 24 at Bryan (0-3).

“Man, it’s been crazy, but it definitely feels good. It definitely gives us a little bit of momentum going into district, so I’m just excited right now,” Howard said. “Even though other circumstances happened (in the fourth quarter), it didn’t matter. We still got the ‘W.’ In the second half we were just trying to get everybody some burn.”


GIMME THAT: Temple senior defensive end Dion Saunders (47) and senior defensive tackle Tommy Torres celebrate in front of Hutto quarterback Grayson Doggett after Saunders recovered a second-quarter fumble on a bad snap during the Wildcats' 60-53 win over the Hippos on Friday night at Wildcat Stadium. Temple limited Hutto to 21 points through three quarters before the Hippos scored five fourth-quarter touchdowns while primarily going against the Wildcats' reserve defenders. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



Stewart spoke earlier in the week about wanting his team to play not only better and more consistently but also harder at all times. Stewart got the desired response from his resilient Wildcats, even though their fourth-quarter shortcomings on defense and special teams somewhat tempered his enthusiasm.

“Oh, man, our guys came out and played their tails off. We had fun. We told them we were going to open up the playbook and that we were going to trust the kids and just turn them loose. I thought they did a real good job of that,” Stewart said. “I think our reserves gave up 32 points, which is not acceptable. I’m not going to focus on the negative, but I told the guys (afterward), ‘If you’re wearing a jersey, you’re expected to play at a high level. I don’t coach 2s, 3s and 4s any differently (than the starters).’ They didn’t show up tonight like we should’ve, and we’ve got to work on that. They’ve got to practice with more intention.

“But by and large, we’re going to celebrate any win. Scoring 60 points, how about that offensive output? I’m very proud of our guys. We’ll celebrate it, but there’s a lot of film to watch and a lot of stuff to fix.”

Temple snapped a three-game losing streak that dated to its 56-28 defeat against Rockwall-Heath in the area round of the Class 6A Division II playoffs last December. The Wildcats’ last win was a 38-0 bi-district home victory over Waxahachie one week earlier.

All three of Rumfield’s touchdown passes – he’s thrown five TDs in the last two games – went for 50-plus yards: 52 to Anderson, 57 to Williams and a 65-yard strike to Williams (three catches for 133 yards) 2 minutes into the third period to give Temple a commanding 42-21 lead. The sophomore QB who moved to Temple in May benefited from an improving offensive line that played its best game, protecting the passer and opening big holes for backs Howard and fellow senior Tavaris Sullivan (two touchdown runs).

“I’ve said from jump street that Reese Rumfield is our quarterback and if he stays healthy and stays on track, he’ll set every (Temple passing) record known to man," Stewart said of Rumfield, who was 13-of-19 passing for 302 yards with three touchdowns and no interceptions after being intercepted twice by Magnolia West a week ago. "He did a great job, and that’s who he is. He’s kind of loosened up, he likes having fun and you see it. That dude’s special.

"And our O-line did a great job. (Hutto) was huge up front and fast and physical, but I thought we played really consistent tonight and established the run, especially in the second half.”

Senior left tackle Colby Rice is the only returning starter on a line that includes sophomore left guard Endrei Sauls, senior center Jose Faz, junior right guard Augustin Silva and junior right tackle Jeremiah Mungia. Senior tight end Smith also provided key blocking against Hutto.

Leading 21-14 midway through the second quarter, Temple quickly expanded its advantage to 35-14 with a 6-yard touchdown run by junior Mikal Harrison-Pilot out of the quarterback position and then senior speedster Tr’Darius Taylor’s 52-yard punt return for a TD 2½ minutes later. Wildcats senior Danis Bajric kicked a 31-yard field goal and was 7-for-7 on extra points.

After becoming fatigued while playing 91 plays against top-ranked Westlake and 86 against Magnolia West, Temple’s defense played mostly well in the first half against Hutto. However, it did allow three long touchdowns: Jairiez Lambert’s 45-yard reception from Grayson Doggett, backup quarterback William Hammond’s 76-yard dash through the middle and Doggett’s 41-yard pass to Lambert late in the second quarter to make it a 35-21 game at halftime.

The Wildcats responded by shutting Hutto out in the third quarter as they built a 52-21 advantage before the Hippos – who finished with 400 passing yards and more than 560 overall – erupted for 32 fourth-quarter points, highlighted by sophomore Hammond’s four touchdown passes against Temple’s reserve defenders. Damayon Jones caught a 10-yard touchdown pass with 14 seconds remaining and, after Temple failed to secure the ensuing kickoff, Gary Choice caught a 2-yard TD pass as time expired to make the final score more respectable.

“We’ve got to eliminate mistakes. And we’ve got to be judicious (about substitutions),” Stewart said, clearly displeased by Temple’s late-game breakdowns on defense. “When I wholesale (substitute) the 2s in, I expect at least a decent level of play. They’re not the 1s and I got that, but we can’t just fall apart, either.

“We got to the point where we made that a one-score game, which was absolutely ridiculous. So we’ll practice a little different with those guys. But man, if we can just keep going in the right direction and stay healthy, this team could be (successful).”

Temple’s starting offense scored zero touchdowns against Westlake's stingy defense and only two against Magnolia West, but the Wildcats couldn’t have gotten off to a hotter start against Hutto squad that rebounded from a 59-11 loss to state-ranked College Station by winning 27-14 at Waco last week.


NOWHERE TO GO: Temple senior Samari Howard swarms Hutto punter Timothy Hollenbeck for an 18-yard loss following a high snap during the third quarter of the Wildcats' 60-53 win over the Hippos in Friday's non-district finale at Wildcat Stadium. Howard, District 12-6A's Co-MVP last year, rushed for 138 yards with a 31-yard touchdown and ran in a 2-point conversion as Temple secured its first victory of the season. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



After Temple’s defense began the game by forcing a three-and-out series, Rumfield’s crisp pass zipped through the slanting Smith’s hands, but an opportunistic Anderson was in the perfect spot to grab it 10 yards downfield before racing past the secondary for the 52-yard touchdown and a 7-0 lead with 1:20 gone.

A week after his early interception set up a Rumfield-to-Williams touchdown pass, Mitchell then recovered the ball at Temple’s 43-yard line after the Wildcats forced a fumble by running back Banks.

Temple proceeded to demonstrate its quick-strike ability on the next play when Williams ran a post pattern and Rumfield’s pass hit him in stride en route to a 57-yard touchdown and a 14-0 lead only 2:50 into the game.

“Our offensive coordinator, Coach (Josh) Sadler, from the jump he said, ‘We’re going to go attack them early and we’re not going to let off the gas at all,’” Howard said. “We’ve got to play it how we just played it tonight. We’ve got to go attack fast.”

Hutto did battle back, though. Late in the first quarter Lambert beat his defender down the right seam for a 45-yard touchdown reception from Doggett, then Howard broke off three consecutive good runs but fumbled and the Hippos recovered at their 24. On the opening period’s final play, Hutto inserted Hammond at quarterback and the skilled sophomore broke through a hole in Temple’s line before sprinting untouched for a 76-yard touchdown and a 14-14 deadlock.

Undeterred, the Wildcats answered by scoring the next three touchdowns in a 6-minute outburst to build a 35-14 advantage. Temple drove to Hutto’s 31 on its ensuing possession before Howard blasted off left tackle, cut back and then tightroped the left sideline for his first rushing touchdown this season.

Wildcats defensive end Dion Saunders then recovered a fumble at his 44 after a bad snap, and a scrambling Rumfield threw to Harrison-Pilot on the left sideline for a 19-yard gain. A Hutto penalty moved the ball to the 6 before Harrison-Pilot, in the shotgun formation, dashed off right tackle and cruised inside the pylon for a touchdown and a 28-14 lead.


HE'S GONE: Temple senior Tr'Darius Taylor sprints past Hutto sophomore William Hammond to score a touchdown on a 52-yard punt return as head coach Scott Stewart (right, holding headset) looks on during the second quarter of the Wildcats' 60-53 victory over the Hippos on Friday night at Wildcat Stadium. Taylor's score capped a flurry of three touchdowns in 6 minutes for Temple (1-2), which earned its first win this season in its non-district finale. The Wildcats begin District 12-6A competition at Bryan on Sept. 24. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



Two minutes later, a Hutto punt slipped through Taylor’s hands at midfield, but the fleet-footed senior quickly scooped it up at his 48 and then showcased the speed that made him the anchor leg on Temple’s 4x100-meter relay team that placed sixth in May’s 6A state meet. He darted right, broke a tackle, then cut back left and outran everyone along the sideline for a 52-yard touchdown return and a 35-14 game 3:17 before halftime.

Temple’s defense then broke down as Lambert found an opening in the secondary to catch Doggett’s pass and sprint in for the 41-yard touchdown that trimmed the Wildcats’ lead to 35-21.

However, Temple’s offense came back in the third quarter with a 17-point flurry that essentially gave the Wildcats enough breathing room to withstand Hutto’s big fourth-period finish. On the second half’s first series, Williams blazed past defenders along the right seam and caught Rumfield’s well-thrown pass for a 65-yard touchdown and a 42-21 lead.

After a short Hutto punt, Howard ripped off back-to-back 19-yard runs before Sullivan rushed straight ahead for a 2-yard touchdown to make it 49-21. Hippos punter Timothy Hollenbeck then had to retreat to field a high snap and Howard swarmed him at the 2 for a key turnover. Temple was unable to convert it into a touchdown, but Bajric kicked a 31-yard field goal to extend the lead to 52-21 with 4:18 remaining in the third.

As the Wildcats began to mix in their reserve defenders, Hutto drove to the 1 before hulking junior Brody Bujnoch bullied his way across the goal line for a fourth-down touchdown on the fourth quarter’s first play, though Saunders blocked the extra point to keep the score 52-27.

Temple’s offense bogged down in the fourth, and Hutto used Hammond’s touchdown passes of 17 yards to Lambert and 4 yards to Carson LaPlante against backup defenders to slice the Wildcats’ lead to 52-40 with 2:44 remaining.

But Harrison-Pilot’s lengthy return on the ensuing onside kickoff led to Sullivan’s powerful 4-yard touchdown run, and holder Howard picked up a low snap and dashed inside the right pylon for the 2-point conversion to make it 60-40 with 1:39 left.

Never-say-die Hutto then put a dent in the final margin as Hammond hit Jones for a 10-yard touchdown and, after Temple mishandled the onside kickoff, found to a wide-open Choice for a 2-yard TD as time finally expired, a few minutes past 11 p.m.

“I thought our first two units on each side of the ball came out and played their tails off,” Stewart said. “(It was) sloppy, sloppy, sloppy on special teams, but we’ll take a win any way we can get it right now.”

After Temple snapped its frustrating losing skid, Stewart said the most important thing to him was that the Wildcats answered the coaches’ challenge of, as Howard put it, simply getting back to playing Temple Wildcat football.

“The thing we said was, ‘The guys who established all this tradition for the last 100 years, they’re not coming tonight. They didn’t come last week, they’re not coming next week, they’re not coming any week. They did their part; now you’ve got to do yours. The magic is not in the (blue-front, white-back) pants; the magic is about the men in the pants,’” Stewart said. “So we harped on that all week long.”

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