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OFF TO THE RACES: Temple senior running back Samari Howard beats a College Station defender to catch sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield's pass en route to a 71-yard touchdown during Thursday evening's scrimmage at Cougar Field. It was one of two TD tosses for Rumfield, who completed a 42-yard score to junior Mikal Harrison-Pilot but also threw two interceptions. Temple begins its regular season next Friday night at Wildcat Stadium against Austin Westlake, winner of two straight Class 6A state championships. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


COLLEGE STATION – When Thursday evening’s football scrimmage at Cougar Field concluded, the scoreboard read College Station 35, Temple 14.

The score itself in the teams’ two quarters of timed action didn’t overly bother Wildcats sixth-year head coach Scott Stewart, who knew full well going into it that competing against a talented, explosive and well-coached Cougars team had the potential to giver his squad some difficulty.

From Stewart’s perspective, the most important thing was that Temple’s players and coaches learned exactly what they need to focus on improving before two-time reigning Class 6A state champion Austin Westlake invades Wildcat Stadium for next Friday night’s season opener.

“To me, in a scrimmage I know the scoreboard’s on, but we were subbing people in and out. I don’t think that’s a true (indicator),” Stewart said. “But I also will be the first one to say there is a lot of work that needs to be done. And that’s why you scrimmage people of this caliber, is because they’re going to show you exactly where you’re deficient.

“To me, a scrimmage is finding out what you are, who you are and where you are,” he added. “So we’ve got a lot of questions to answer on what we are, who we are and where we are and how the kids respond to that. I don’t know if the Green Bay Packers can beat Westlake, but College Station is going to give you as good a look as anybody in the state, because they’re going to be good early, they’re very well-coached and they don’t screw up assignments.”

In a matchup of perennial playoff qualifiers who compiled 10-2 records last season, Class 5A Division I College Station scored five touchdowns apiece in the scrimmage’s controlled portion of 12-play series and then the two timed quarters.

A week before College Station’s Thursday night season opener against Hutto in Pflugerville, veteran head coach Steve Huff said the scrimmage against familiar opponent Temple was vital for the development of his Cougars.

“I think the main thing we needed to get from this was to see that speed, to see game speed and get some conditioning in game situations and that intensity,” said Huff, who’s guided College Station to seven straight playoff berths, highlighted by the 5A Division II state championship in 2017. “You look at the heat and you’re trying to get kids in shape. We left most of our kids in and Scott did the same thing, too, trying to get our kids to where they’re playing close to three quarters.”

Temple standouts such as senior running back and reigning District 12-6A Co-MVP Samari Howard and junior linebacker and 12-6A Defensive MVP Taurean York played deep into the scrimmage on a hot, humid night, whereas junior wide receiver Mikal Harrison-Pilot caught one touchdown pass but had a lighter overall workload.

Boosted by accurate senior quarterback Jett Huff and a bevy of skilled backs and receivers, the fast-paced, multiple-look Cougars produced nine offensive TDs – five passes and four runs – that averaged 47 yards. College Station’s defense added a score late in the first timed quarter when A.J. Tisdell intercepted a pass by Temple sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield and returned it 37 yards for a touchdown.


DENIED: College Station defensive back A.J. Tisdell (left) reaches in front of Temple senior wide receiver Tr'Darius Taylor to knock away a pass during Thursday's scrimmage at Cougar Field. Tisdell also made an interception and returned it 37 yards for a touchdown. (Photo by Michael Miller, The Bryan-College Station Eagle/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



College Station scored two touchdowns on its first five snaps in the first timed quarter. Huff, the coach's son, threw to Deonte Blue for a 75-yard catch-and-run TD. Temple responded as Howard got open down the middle and hauled in Rumfield's pass en route to the 71-yard score, but the Cougars came right back as running back Marquise Collins tore through the Wildcats' defense for a 56-yard TD sprint that gave College Station the lead to stay at 14-7.

“We have to drop our egos and have some hard conversations and be critical of ourselves,” Stewart said.

Said senior wide receiver Devan Williams, who caught several Rumfield passes, about Temple’s scrimmage performance: “I think it just helped us realize what we need to fix and what we can do in the future. We saw a lot of good things and there were a lot of bad things as well. But besides those bad things, we’re just going to focus on what we need to fix, what we can do better and go from there.”

Temple was limited to three touchdowns on offense and four overall. In the controlled portion, Harrison-Pilot caught a 42-yard TD pass from Rumfield down the left sideline and sophomore reserve QB Damarion Willis rushed straight ahead for a 7-yard score.

The Wildcats’ lone offensive TD in the timed segment came when Rumfield connected with Howard for a 71-yard catch-and-run score. Defense capped the scoring for Temple in the final quarter, as senior tackle Tommy Torres swarmed Huff and dislodged the ball from him before senior end Dion Saunders grabbed the fumble and raced 53 yards for the touchdown return.

Playing for Temple’s second-unit defense during the controlled portion, senior Frankquan Sauls provided a highlight when the burly tackle made an athletic, sprawling interception on a screen pass. In the first timed quarter, Wildcats junior cornerback Naeten Mitchell appeared to have been beaten on a pass play but made a late recovery and raked the ball out of the hands of College Station receiver Dalton Carnes, who earlier caught Huff touchdown passes of 53 and 68 yards.


TEAMING UP: Temple junior linebacker Taurean York (top) and a defensive teammate tackle a College Station ball carrier during the teams' scrimmage Thursday evening at Cougar Field. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



Rumfield, who in May transferred from Midlothian Heritage to Temple, entered the scrimmage as the frontrunner to become the Wildcats’ starting quarterback in a competition that also includes senior Kaleb Hill and sophomores Willis and Luke Law.

Operating the first-unit offense, Rumfield demonstrated his passing skill on the long touchdown strikes to Harrison-Pilot and Howard to go along with several connections with Williams. However, he also exhibited his relative lack of varsity experience while throwing two interceptions – one on an underthrown pass at midfield on the next play after Harrison-Pilot’s TD, and the other one the Cougars’ pick-six.

“He played like a sophomore, and what I mean by that is I think you saw what we see with his skill set and his talent,” Stewart said of Rumfield. “The sophomore piece comes in where sometimes young guys try to win it on every throw. You’ve heard me say it over the years: sometimes you’ve got to know when to hit the lady in the front row with the nachos.

“Sometimes he sees it late and doesn’t get his feet squared away. That’s just technique. Throwing that wide ball to the field on a run-pass option (on College Station’s interceptions return for a touchdown), that’s not the window we want. It was probably there when he turned it loose, but playing 6A at the varsity level is a little different from playing 5A at the freshman level. Those windows are very small.”


CLEAN POCKET: Temple sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield fires a pass as teammates block College Station defenders during Thursday evening's scrimmage at Cougar Field. Rumfield, contending for the starting QB position, threw touchdown passes of 42 yards to junior Mikal Harrison-Pilot and 71 yards to senior Samari Howard, but one of the two interceptions he threw was returned 37 yards for a TD. (Photo by Mike Lefner, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



Williams, who moved back to Temple after spending his junior year at Wichita Falls City View, said he’s confident in Rumfield’s ability to quarterback the Wildcats.

“I love Reese. He’s young, so he still has a lot of room to improve,” Williams said. “But from what I’ve seen and what he can do, I’ve got a lot of trust in him and faith in him to move us down the field.”

Despite the up-and-down performance in the scrimmage, Stewart believes that he and his staff have seen enough proficiency and potential from Rumfield to feel good about him beginning the season as Temple’s starting quarterback. The last non-senior to begin a season as the Wildcats’ starting QB was Chad President in 2013.

“I don’t see a world where Reese is not our starting quarterback,” Stewart said. “He’s probably separated himself, but we’re not going to completely close the door. The concept is that even if you name a starter at that position, you still want competition.”

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RIGHT INTO THE ACTION: Sophomore quarterback Reese Rumfield will direct Temple's first-team offense when the Wildcats scrimmage College Station on Thursday evening at approximately 6:30 at Cougar Field. Joining the Midlothian Heritage transfer in the Wildcats' quarterback competition are senior Kaleb Hill and sophomores Luke Law and Damarion Willis. Both Temple coach Scott Stewart and College Station coach Steve Huff guided their teams to 10-2 seasons in 2020. (File photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE

gwille2@hot.rr.com


COLLEGE STATION – After practicing amongst and against each other for a week and a half, the Temple Wildcats are more than ready to test themselves against somebody else.

And with reigning state champion Austin Westlake coming to Temple for a season-opening showdown next Friday night, the timing is right for the Wildcats to go through something of a dress rehearsal.

For its only preseason scrimmage, Temple will travel to College Station to take on the always-tough Cougars on Thursday evening at Cougar Field.

The sub-varsity teams will begin their approximately one-hour scrimmage at 5 p.m., to be followed by the varsity squads’ scrimmage around 6:30 after the teams have warmed up.

“I love scrimmaging them,” Temple sixth-year head coach Scott Stewart said Wednesday about College Station, which has advanced to the state playoffs in all seven of its varsity seasons under the guidance of veteran head coach Steve Huff, whose record is 73-18. “You know College Station is always going to be a top-tier program. They always give us a really good look and are very well-coached.”

Both Temple and College Station compiled 10-2 seasons in 2020 and are expected to contend for district championships and make strong playoff runs this year.

After going 7-0 in District 12-6A last year, the Wildcats seek to capture their third straight district title and ninth consecutive postseason berth. College Station was the 8-5A Division I runner-up last year to Magnolia, whose head coach is former Temple offensive coordinator Craig Martin.

Temple and College Station were District 18-5A rivals in 2016 and 2017, clashing in a pair of late-season duels for the league championship. The Cougars staved off the Wildcats both times in memorable battles, prevailing 17-16 at Wildcat Stadium in 2016 and then seizing a 26-20 overtime win in 2017 en route to the Class 5A Division II state championship.

Temple ascended to the 6A classification in 2018, and this will be the fourth consecutive season that the Wildcats have met College Station for a scrimmage.

Stewart said the first half of Thursday’s scrimmage, which should last approximately two hours, will be the “controlled” portion, with alternating 12-play series matching the squads’ first-team offenses and defenses and then the second-team units. The plan is to go all the way through and then repeat the order.

The second half of the scrimmage will be the timed portion, featuring a regular game clock in the third quarter and then a running clock in the fourth period, other than when possession changes. The teams will practice kicking and punting situations, although kickers and punters will not be rushed and there will be no coverage on kickoffs.

Temple hasn’t had a returning starter at quarterback since two-year starter Reid Hesse in 2016, which was Stewart’s first season as head coach and concluded with the Wildcats reaching the 5A Division I state championship game. Beginning with TJ Rumfield in 2017 and continuing with Jared Wiley in 2018, Vance Willis in 2019 and Humberto Arizmendi in 2020, Temple has had a one-year senior starting QB in four straight seasons.

That is very likely to change this season, with sophomore QB Reese Rumfield getting most of the practice repetitions with the projected starting offense. Stewart said Rumfield, a skilled passer who transferred in from Midlothian Heritage in May, will take the field with the first-unit offense in Thursday’s scrimmage.

The other quarterbacks who are competing for playing time and/or varsity roster spots are senior Kaleb Hill – who’s also in the defensive backfield mix – and sophomores Luke Law and Damarion Willis. Stewart said Law and Willis likely will also play in the sub-varsity scrimmage.

Versatile junior Mikal Harrison-Pilot is another option at quarterback, but Stewart said the four-star recruit with 30-plus major college offers is focusing on his wide receiver position along with some probable action on defense at safety. Harrison-Pilot, a two-year starter on varsity, figures to get some snaps at QB in specialty situations, such as near the goal line.

Stewart reported no major injuries from the first 1½ weeks of training camp and said he didn’t expect to hold any players out of the scrimmage at College Station.

Next Friday’s 7:30 p.m. season opener with perennial power Westlake – the 6A Division II state champion in 2019 and the 6A D-I champion last season – will be the first of three consecutive home games for Temple. Also traveling to Bob McQueen Field at Wildcat Stadium will be Magnolia West, whose new head coach is former Temple offensive coordinator Ben McGehee, on Sept. 3 and Hutto on Sept. 10.

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Temple resident and 2018 Belton High School graduate William Paysse advanced to the 64-player match play portion of the 121st U.S. Amateur Championship at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pennsylvania. Texas A&M player Paysse had a 1-up lead through six holes Thursday against Notre Dame's Davis Chatfield of Attleboro, Massachusetts. However, Chatfield won the next four holes to go 3-up and then held off Paysse's late charge by making birdie on the 17th hole to complete his 2-and-1 victory. It was the second straight U.S. Am appearance for Paysse, who competed at Bandon Dunes in Oregon in 2020. (File photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




staff report


Temple resident and Belton High School graduate William Paysse advanced to match play competition in the 121st U.S. Amateur Championship, but the Texas A&M golfer's run ended Thursday afternoon with a 2-and-1 loss to Davis Chatfield in the Round of 64 at famed Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pennsylvania.

Making his second consecutive U.S. Amateur appearance, the 21-year-old Paysse qualified for the 64-player match play field earlier this week by shooting a 1-over-par 141 total in stroke play – one round each at Longue Vue Club (70) and Oakmont (71), where the U.S. Open has been played nine times.

The No. 43-seeded Paysse was 1 down through four holes against the No. 22-seeded Chatfield, a Notre Dame player from Attleboro, Massachusetts. However, Paysse then won the fifth and sixth holes – both with birdies – to seize a 1-up lead that proved to be his only advantage in the round.

Chatfield responded by winning the next four holes, the first three with pars, to go 3-up through 10. Still 3-down with six holes remaining, Paysse won the next two holes with a birdie on the par-3 13th and a par at the par-4 14th to get back to 1-down with four holes left.

Paysse and Chatfield tied the next two holes. At the 313-yard par-4 17th, Chatfield found the fairway with his tee shot, hit his wedge approach shot close and made the 12-foot birdie putt to put the pressure on Paysse, whose drive came to rest in the greenside rough. The Aggie's deft pitch shot to the elevated green left him with a 5-foot putt for birdie. Needing to make the putt to extend Chatfield to the 18th hole, Paysse's putt slid just past the right edge.

In his Round of 32 match later Thursday, Chatfield was 1-up through 13 holes against No. 11 seed Alex Fitzpatrick of England when inclement weather pushed the remainder of their match into Friday. The event, which began with 312 players for two rounds of stroke-play qualifying, is scheduled to be completed Sunday.

Paysse, who's entering his fourth season with the Texas A&M golf program and is the world's No. 270-ranked amateur, also competed in the 2020 U.S. Amateur at Bandon Dunes in Oregon.

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