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No storybook finish against De La Salle
PLEASANT HILL Network television's sweeps period ended a week ago. Too bad for Berkeley High's football team.
If the networks were still racking their imaginations for ways to boost their ratings with emotion drenched movies of the week, the Yellow Jackets might be playing in two weeks for the North Coast Section Class 4A championship. At least on the tube.
A good season, seven victories against just two losses and second place in the East Bay Athletic League. And then an unintentional eligibility rules infractions disqualifies two players and costs six forfeits.
The star quarterback,replica vintage cartier love bracelet for sale, Larry Young,replica cartier bracelet diamond, is critically injured in an automobile accident. His teammates visit his hospital room and promise they will win their next game in his honor.
Berkeley scores an upset 47 30 win over Antioch in the 4A quarterfinals,replica cartier promise bracelet, as pledged.
Young goes home from the hospital in time for Thanksgiving and, the next night, comes to Diablo Valley College to inspire his team to advance to the class title game Dec. 14 at Oakland Coliseum.
But it is no longer sweeps week, and the semifinal opponent was De La Salle High, winner of 63 straight games now following a 50 0 victory over Berkeley that might have been by just about any margin De La Salle coach Bob Ladouceur chose.
So it will be De La Salle playing for a fifth straight NCS championship in two weeks against the winner of Saturday's Logan (Union City) Pittsburg semifinal at Chabot College,replica cartier love bangle bracelet.
Berkeley coach Joe Martin did dig into his playbook for trick plays in his search for some possibility of victory.
An attempted halfback pass failed when the lateral over to the designated passer, Devin Martin, bounced off the turf and was recovered by De La Salle at Berkeley's 7 yard line. Quarterback Scott Pollock reached the end zone on the next play for a 14 0 Spartans lead with 1:09 of the first period remaining.
With 44 seconds left in the first half and De La Salle up 28 0, Berkeley attempted another gadget a halfback toss to Cartier Brown for Brown to lateral back to John Smith. The second toss was juggled, however, and De La Salle linebacker Greg Brown Davis recovered the ball and ran 30 yards for an apparent touchdown. One of De La Salle's nine penalties (for 125 yards) wiped out the play, but another Berkeley challenge to the football gods had fizzled.
"Some calls didn't go our way like we had hoped," said Berkeley's John Vogler, the tight end who shifted to quarterback two weeks ago to replace Young, "and some plays didn't go our way. And they played a hell of a game."
Said Martin, "We made some drops, made some errors and they were able to capitalize on it like a good team does."
If the first half was a De La Salle breeze, the third quarter was a deluge. In the first seven minutes, De La Salle ran one offensive play . . . and scored 22 points.
At 1:56 into the period, sophomore Atari Callen returned a punt 40 yards for a touchdown. On Berkeley's next play from scrimmage, linebacker Justin Alumbaugh intercepted Vogler and returned it 24 yards into the end zone. Berkeley advanced from its 20 to its 45 with 6:35 unplayed before having to punt turning the ball over to the Spartans for the first time in the half and in bad field position at that, the DLS 12.
The give was to Callen, who sliced through right tackle and sprinted 88 yards for a touchdown which, with Dan Brezac's sixth PAT of the night, made it 48 0.
Next possession, Berkeley went three and out but the out was a high punt snap from the Jackets' 27 which flew over James Barnes' head and bounced out of the end zone for a safety. That was the cue for De La Salle to insert its reserves for the rest of the game.
PLEASANT HILL Network television's sweeps period ended a week ago. Too bad for Berkeley High's football team.
If the networks were still racking their imaginations for ways to boost their ratings with emotion drenched movies of the week, the Yellow Jackets might be playing in two weeks for the North Coast Section Class 4A championship. At least on the tube.
A good season, seven victories against just two losses and second place in the East Bay Athletic League. And then an unintentional eligibility rules infractions disqualifies two players and costs six forfeits.
The star quarterback,replica vintage cartier love bracelet for sale, Larry Young,replica cartier bracelet diamond, is critically injured in an automobile accident. His teammates visit his hospital room and promise they will win their next game in his honor.
Berkeley scores an upset 47 30 win over Antioch in the 4A quarterfinals,replica cartier promise bracelet, as pledged.
Young goes home from the hospital in time for Thanksgiving and, the next night, comes to Diablo Valley College to inspire his team to advance to the class title game Dec. 14 at Oakland Coliseum.
But it is no longer sweeps week, and the semifinal opponent was De La Salle High, winner of 63 straight games now following a 50 0 victory over Berkeley that might have been by just about any margin De La Salle coach Bob Ladouceur chose.
So it will be De La Salle playing for a fifth straight NCS championship in two weeks against the winner of Saturday's Logan (Union City) Pittsburg semifinal at Chabot College,replica cartier love bangle bracelet.
Berkeley coach Joe Martin did dig into his playbook for trick plays in his search for some possibility of victory.
An attempted halfback pass failed when the lateral over to the designated passer, Devin Martin, bounced off the turf and was recovered by De La Salle at Berkeley's 7 yard line. Quarterback Scott Pollock reached the end zone on the next play for a 14 0 Spartans lead with 1:09 of the first period remaining.
With 44 seconds left in the first half and De La Salle up 28 0, Berkeley attempted another gadget a halfback toss to Cartier Brown for Brown to lateral back to John Smith. The second toss was juggled, however, and De La Salle linebacker Greg Brown Davis recovered the ball and ran 30 yards for an apparent touchdown. One of De La Salle's nine penalties (for 125 yards) wiped out the play, but another Berkeley challenge to the football gods had fizzled.
"Some calls didn't go our way like we had hoped," said Berkeley's John Vogler, the tight end who shifted to quarterback two weeks ago to replace Young, "and some plays didn't go our way. And they played a hell of a game."
Said Martin, "We made some drops, made some errors and they were able to capitalize on it like a good team does."
If the first half was a De La Salle breeze, the third quarter was a deluge. In the first seven minutes, De La Salle ran one offensive play . . . and scored 22 points.
At 1:56 into the period, sophomore Atari Callen returned a punt 40 yards for a touchdown. On Berkeley's next play from scrimmage, linebacker Justin Alumbaugh intercepted Vogler and returned it 24 yards into the end zone. Berkeley advanced from its 20 to its 45 with 6:35 unplayed before having to punt turning the ball over to the Spartans for the first time in the half and in bad field position at that, the DLS 12.
The give was to Callen, who sliced through right tackle and sprinted 88 yards for a touchdown which, with Dan Brezac's sixth PAT of the night, made it 48 0.
Next possession, Berkeley went three and out but the out was a high punt snap from the Jackets' 27 which flew over James Barnes' head and bounced out of the end zone for a safety. That was the cue for De La Salle to insert its reserves for the rest of the game.
The Wall