Saturday, September 30, 2006

Friday Night Insight

It's hard to believe that 2/3 of the season is already behind us, and in less than a month, we'll be down to a handful of teams in each division.

As always, there were some things that stood out for me on Friday night. And as always, I'll share them with you here.

Fondy's confidence grows: Say what you will about an offense that doesn't seem to score all that much, but you'd be hard pressed to find a team with more confidence than Fondy right now. Lesser teams would have buckled against the Wildcats on Friday night but the Cardinals somehow found a way to get the job done on defense against a very, very good offensive team. Aside from a 30-yard pass that set up West's first touchdown, I didn't see much from quarterback Tyler Wegner, although he did have two receivers drop passes. Sure, Agrell ran for 167 yards, but he never broke the big one (for a touchdown at least). At the beginning of the year I thought that Fondy was going to be a borderline playoff team, two weeks ago I thought they'd be out in the first round, but now I'm starting to think that this is a team that could stick around for a while come November.

How 'bout those Orioles: You knew it was going to happen eventually. North Fond du Lac picked up its first win since Oct. 25, 2002, when it beat Princeton 36-7 on Friday night. Scott Woicek was a monster, running for 249 yards. Princeton just could not stop North Fondy's offense. Congratulations to coach Nate Lehman and the rest of his staff for giving those kids something to be proud of heading into next season.

Look out for New Holstein: OK, let's all pay attention to New Holstein now. The Huskies pulled off a big victory over Kiel, beating them 23-16 in overtime to stay atop the Eastern Wisconsin Conference and punch their ticket for their second playoff appearance since 1998. I'll admit that I had written them off after a couple of tough losses early in the season, but now they are legit title contenders... provided they can win at least two of three against Plymouth, Kewaskum and Sheboygan Falls.

Horicon is good: Don't think I need to say much more about that. Mayville's not going to see that type of speed the rest of the year.

Friday, September 29, 2006

You're looking live (at a blog from) Titan Stadium on the shores of the Fox River in Oshkosh, Wisconsin....

Forgive the Brent Musberger intro, but I get a little worked up for these things. It's about 35 minutes before kickoff of Oshkosh West and Fond du Lac. Check back here often for updates, insight and general sarcastic humor throughout the night.

You can also click here for updated scores and highlights from other games. My radio isn't working too well because of the rainy weather in the area, but I'll also post scores here as I hear of them.

Thanks for reading!

32 minutes before kickoff: I just thought I should let everyone know that there is more media here than for some lower level college games. I think I'm the only print media person, but there are two radio stations and two public access television stations set up to call this game. I'm occupying a box that is supposed to be used by WRST, the UW-Oshkosh student station, but I don't think they call games. At least I hope they don't, because I'm rather comfy and don't want to move.

8:37, first quarter: Aside from an 11-yard run by Chris Agrell on the game's first play, neither team is doing much of anything. It looks like Fondy's Ben Anderson is having some troubles getting his feet underneath him on the FieldTurf at Titan, which is quite slick from a soft drizzle. Both teams punted on their first possession.

End 1st quarter, 0-0: It's still scoreless, but West is at the Fondy 45 and just converted a fourth-and-1.

***Oshkosh West 7, Fond du Lac 0, 9:18 left, 2nd quarter: Kyle Hanford scored on a 9-yard run for the Wildcats, but the play that set it all up was a 30-yard pass from Tyler Wegner to Jamie Braasch. That brought the ball to the Fondy 14, and a 5-yard run by Robert Reed set up Hanford's 9-yard score.

3:00 left, 2nd quarter: Fondy's Will Dhonau left the game with an apparent knee injury. He's been looked at on the sidelines right now and had to be helped off the field. West, meanwhile, is putting together another drive. Keeping the ball on the ground, the Wildcats are at midfield.

Oshkosh West 7, Fond du Lac 3, Halftime: Quite the turn of events here at Titan Stadium. After West and Fondy traded interceptions, a 73-yard run by Fondy's Paul Biolo brought the ball down to the West 22. An 11-yard run by Josh Korb set up a 28-yard field goal by Kyle Senn just before the second quarter ended. Prior to Korb's 73-yard run, Fondy only had 17 rushing yards and one first down. Fondy gets the ball to start the second half.

Halftime thoughts: Anyone that has seen this game is probably tickled pink that Fondy was able to scrap a field goal out of that first half. This game could very easily be 14-0 instead of 7-3. The Cards are having big trouble moving the ball, and Ben Anderson hasn't looked comfortable at all dropping back to pass. The turf is slick and the rain is starting to pick up a bit.

The defense has been playing well in spurts, and has contained Chris Agrell for the most part. Agrell only has 8 carries for 28 yards, but Kyle Hanford and Robert Reed have combined for an additional 47 rushing yards.

***Fond du Lac 10, Oshkosh West 7, 6:29 left, 3rd quarter: So much for not being able to move the ball. The Cardinals opened the second half with an 11-play, 64-yard drive capped on a 7-yard touchdown run by Mike Shea, his first carry of the game. Shea replaced fullback Steve Chesna, who was injured on the previous play but walked off the field on his own power.

End of the third quarter: Fondy has all the momentum in this game. West fumbled just as it was about to take the lead, but the Cardinals recovered in the end zone for a touchback. Anderson just completed a 17-yard pass to a wide-open Kyle Duquaine over the middle, and Fondy is moving the ball again.

4:01 left: Fondy is going to hand this game over to its defense. Facing a fourth-and-2 at the West 46, coach Brad Kozaczuk has elected to punt rather than risk going for it. Fondy leads 10-7.

2:00 left: Chris Agrell fumbled on what may be West's last possession of the game, and Fondy takes over at its own 35. Moments earlier, Agrell looked to have broken loose for the potential go-ahead score, but was dragged down at midfield after a 43-yard gain.

1:18 left: West has the ball at midfield after a 35-yard pass from Wegner to Jamie Braasch.

:56 left: It's all but over. Paul Biolo intercepted a tipped pass at the Fondy 13. West had its chances.

Fond du Lac 10, Oshkosh West 7: Once again, the Fondy defense holds tough. Forcing a fumble when West was nearing the goal line was probably the biggest play of the season for the Cardinals.

But the offense deserves credit, too. The 11-play, 64-yard drive to start the second half was a thing of beauty, and exactly what coach Brad Kozaczuk had in mind when he implemented this version of the wing-T offense.

With a playoff spot already in its pocket, Fondy now becomes West fans. The Wildcats play Kimberly next week, and probably needs to beat the Papermakers for Fondy to have a chance at least a share of the conference title.

Name or no name, Friday is here

I failed in my attempt to come up with a name that both encapsulates the emotion, excitement and signifigance of tonight's games and has the proper alliteration with "Friday." I beg your forgiveness.

I hope that my lack of creativity hasn't curtaied your excitement. If you aren't properly pumped, you can read our weekend preview. Although the written word sometimes fails in getting you properly prepared.

I will be making my usual rounds on various radio pregame shows. I'll be on the Coaches Playbook somewhere around 5:20 p.m. on WFDL-AM 1170. I'll be on the Ripon pregame show on WRPN-AM 1600 somewhere around 6:40-:50 and I'll be on KFIZ-AM 1450 around 6:30. Or, like always, just call my number at work and listen to my voice mail message if you long to hear me speak.

Keep coming back here for regular updates from tonight's West-Fondy game and visit www.fdlreporter.com for updated scores and highlights from around the area.

To tide you over until the action starts tonight, enjoy this little video of the greatest comeback in the history of college football.

Thursday, September 28, 2006

How things work around here

Thanks to T-Unit's posts on various conference message boards on wissports.net, many of you have discovered this little corner of the Web for the first time.

Welcome.

I started this blog at the beginning of the summer to increase interaction between myself and the readers of The Reporter. I had some success with a similar effort when I worked at The Northwestern. I hope to have even more success here.

You'll find a potpurri of commentary, insight and links to interesting stories on this blog. And the occassional You Tube video.

I encourage comments. I crave feedback and dialogue with my readers. But before you leave a comment, please be considerate of others. I will not tolerate attacks on athletes, coaches or officials. Every comment you submit has to be approved before posting, so don't even try.

What I like to create is intelligent discussion that mostly centers on high school and other local sports, but sometimes deviates into other areas of sports.

So look around. Spread the word. Bookmark the page. Come back often.

I'll do my best to make it worth your while.

Not sure about you, but this freaked me out

While I'm sure Somerset fullback Jake Asp enjoys the national attention, he probably wishes it was for something else.

Asp rushed for 362 yards and five touchdowns in a win over New Richmond on Sept. 15, and the next day took a nap.

The rest, well, I'll let you read for yourself.

I'll be sleeping with cotton in my ears from now on.

Vandalism at Mayville?

There was some rumors spread on various Internet message boars that there was graffiti sprayed on Mayville's practice field. Mayville plays Horicon on Friday night in what is being dubbed the Marshbowl, the biggest regular season game for either team this season.

I talked to Mayville coach Tom Noennig on Wednesday night and he said that he heard the rumors, too, but never saw any actual vandalism.

Which is good. Stuff like that is just plain dumb. Sure, it's a big game and you are excited, but be a little more creative. Use it to enhance school spirit and keep it positive. There's no reason to ruin someone else's property.

Bestor named coach at Kettle Moraine

The Dick Diener coaching tree added another branch Wednesday when Brad Bestor, a 1995 grad of Fondy Goodrich, was hired at Kettle Moraine High School on Wednesday.

Bestor will replace Mark Ritter, who resigned last month. Brad previously was an assistant at Germantown, and before that coached with Tom Diener, Dick's brother, at Milwaukee Vincent.

As far as I'm concerned, Kettle Moraine is a sleeping giant. It's located in one of the fastest growing areas of Milwaukee and just completed major enhancements to its athletic facilities. I had a chance to talk to Brad on Wednesday, and he was blown away by the improvements.

We'll have a story coming in the next few days about Bestor's new job, but I will share this one nugget of information with you...

It's not going to be long before Bestor faces off against fellow Fondy alum Adam Zakos, the new coach of the Cardinals. The teams are schedule to take part in a preseason scrimmage hosted by Kettle Moraine during Thanksgiving weekend.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

LIVE UPDATES!

Rumor has it Titan Stadium has wireless internet availability. Provided I can get the proper password, I'll be updating live from the Fondy-West game. So if you are stuck at home or at work, check back here for my witty insights.

Of course, you can always check back after the fact and see that I have no idea what I'm talking about when I make predictions like "So and so is going to have a big second half," or "There's no way Team A will lose this game."

Get pumped.

If only I worked at ESPN

I feel that Friday night needs a name. ESPN likes to go nuts with the "Showdown Saturdays" and "Seperation Saturdays" or "Semi-sedated Saturdays" for those weekends when most of the good teams have byes.

But Friday isn't as user-friendly as far as the snappy names are concerned. Maybe if I had a thesaraus things would be different. But I don't have a thesaraus. I have a newsroom and a camera. Wait, I mean I have a newspaper and a blog.

Sorry for the poor Anchorman reference. But yeah, this weekend needs a name.

Until I think of one, this is what we are looking at this weekend:

Fond du Lac at Oshkosh West: This is usually a big basketball rivalry, but there's a lot riding on this year's football matchup. The winner gets a spot in the playoffs and their conference championship hopes stay alive. West, however, still has yet to play Kimberly, a team that has yet to be challenged.

Horicon at Mayville: I guess this game means something to the people in these towns. I received a few e-mails this week saying that there was vandalism on Mayville's practice field. While I can't condone that, the excitement around the game has me intrigued. For more on the rivalry, visit the Mayville football site.

Sheboygan Falls at Kewaskum: Some of the luster was taken off this mathcup after both were upset by Kiel and Plymouth, respectively, but it still should be a good game. I've had both at No. 1 in my Division 3 poll at some point this year (Wisconsin Lutheran is my No. 1 now) and I'd think the winner of this game will have the inside track to the EWC title.

WLA at Ripon: The last two times these teams have met a trip to a state semifinal was on the line. And in both instances, Ripon smacked WLA in the mouth, including a 35-0 victory last year at Ingalls Field. But WLA is playing extremely well on defense lately, and may have the speed to keep up with Ripon's run game. The Tigers received a boost last week when David Soda returned to the offense and scored three rushing TDs. Soda, of course, broke his ankle against WLA last year.

Yeah, this weekend definitely needs a name, but Friday doesn't really go with anything. Fantastic Friday? Feature Friday? Fun Friday? All lame. Any others would make my bosses angry and my mother blush.

Still, you should get excited.

Monday, September 25, 2006

How I voted this week

The madness continues somewhat. For the second straight week, a No. 1 team falls. Kewaskum, the No. 1 team in Division 3 lost to Plymouth in a hard-fought Eastern Wisconsin Conference game. There were a few other mix-ups as well.

Here's how I sorted out the mess. Feel free to leave a comment if you think I have no idea what I'm doing.

Division 1
1. Stevens Point
2. Arrowhead
3. Hartford
4. Homestead
5. Middleton
6. Kenosha Bradford
7. Wisconsin Rapids
8. Janesville Parker
9. Oshkosh West
10. Sun Prairie

Division 2
1. Ashwaubenon
2. Waunakee
3. Kimberly
4. Menomonie
5. Monona Grove
6. Cedarburg
7. Verona
8. DeForest
9. Milton
10. Waukesha West

Division 3
1. Wisconsin Lutheran
2. Green Bay Notre Dame
3. New Berlin Eisenhower
4. Sheboygan Falls
5. New Berlin West
6. Kewaskum
7. Whitewater
8. Madison Edgewood
9. Union Grove
10. Waupun

Division 4
1. Evansville
2. Platteville
3. Appleton Xavier
4. Lodi
5. Kewaunee
6. Gale-Ettrick-Trempealeau
7. Brodhead-Juda
8. Mayville
9. Ripon
10. Denmark

Division 5
1. Wrightstown
2. Horicon
3. Lancaster
4. Pardeeville
5. Ladysmith
6. Somerset
7. Peshtigo
8. Marshall
9. Random Lake
10. Niagara

Division 6
1. Edgar
2. Stratford
3. Pecatonica-Argyle
4. Fennimore
5. Eau Claire Regis
6. Racine Lutheran
7. Iola-Scandinavia
8. Abbotsford
9. Cedar Grove
10. River Ridge

Division 7
1. Stevens Point Pacelli
2. DeSoto
3. Hillsboro
4. Plum City
5. Hilbert
6. Eleva-Strum
7. Burlington Catholic Central
8. Oshkosh Lourdes
9. Gilman
10. Necedah

Friday, September 22, 2006

We've got you covered

Before I head on out to Fruth Field, remember to check our Web site for all updated scores.

Also, check out Preps Factory. And the week-by-week stats for Matt Haass. And other fun stuff.

Check out our new toy

Before you head out to a game tonight, take a spin around our Web site.

Specifically, go here: www.fdlreporter.com/preps.

It's called Preps Factory, and while we've had it all season, this is the first time we're letting you know about it. The six Gannett Wisconsin Newspapers in this area (Green Bay, Oshkosh, Appleton, Sheboygan, Manitowoc and yours truly) all use the same Internet-based computer program to enter information we receive from area football coaches on game nights. It used to be that each paper would enter this into their own system -- accessible only to those in the office -- and choose to publish as much as they wanted, when they wanted.

Now, you get it all. Every stat that is called by the coaches is saved and can be accessed from anywhere at anytime. There are rosters for every team in our coverage area, and, if you know how to press the right buttons, a game-by-game statistics log for every player in the area.

Check out the team page for Fond du Lac. The roster for Ripon. Or the box score from the Springs-WLA game. How about some receiving leaders?

With any new feature, it has its kinks, so keep clicking around to see all that's offered. Keep coming back. I beg of you.

Meanwhile, we're already at Week 5. There's only one team that can (almost) guarantee a playoff spot with a victory tonight and that team is Laconia, but even then, it's not a lock.

Of course, it's way too early to talk about playoffs. Just ask Jim Mora.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

More you tube goodness

Again, this really has no place on the blog, just a video that I think is beyond hilarious.

Enjoy.

Schools dealing with eligibility issues

There was an interesting column in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel today written by Anthony Witrado regarding eligibility issues in the Milwaukee City conference.

The column pointed out that eligibility for the first two or three games of the football season is often determined by the last six weeks of the previous school year. Most kids aren't thinking three or four months down the road, and don't realize that a few skipped days or a failed class will come back to haunt them come September. Some schools had their best players — in some cases, potential college prospects — watching from the sidelines in one-sided losses.

It's not a problem that's unique to the Milwaukee area. Lots of schools, even a handful in the Fond du Lac area, deal with this problem. Most of the time, it occurs inbetween a coaching changeover. In a roundtable discussion we moderated before the football season began, WLA coach Mark McCormick said that if kids aren't in a spring sport, then they have to come to workout sessions he holds early in the morning. While this is mainly to keep the kids active and in shape before summer begins, it's also to make sure they stay eligible. If kids have to be at school early in the morning for a workout, or after school for a spring sport, they are less likely to skip class or let their grades slip.

According to the column, there is an idea to combine some of the schools for football only to level the playing field. While the idea has received some support, city schools that have strong programs like Milwaukee Vincent and Bay View would almost certainly be opposed. Plus, it's only a stop gap solution. It doesn't change the problem of truancy.

Succesful football programs aren't just the work of one person. It takes an entire team. Sure, the coach should try to make sure his kids are in school. But coaches and teachers are stretched thin enough as it is. It falls on the captains to make sure their teammates are following the rules. It takes a positive influence at home to do the same.

Football, and high school sports in general, should be about more than winning. It should be about learning life lessons of responsibility and accountability. It's time some coaches, players and parents try to do something about the eligibility problem.

Monday, September 18, 2006

No computer problems this week

Well, the reason I didn't post my votes last week was because I didn't vote last week. I had some computer problems and couldn't submit my rankings before the deadline. I would have gone into the office, but I try to stay away from the building for my own mental sanity. There was quite a bit of turmoil this week (Wisconsin Rapids lost to Antigo?), so things may look odd when the rankings come out later today.

Now, on to my picks:

Division 1
1. Stevens Point
2. Arrowhead
3. Hartford
4. Homestead
5. Middleton
6. Kenosha Bradford
7. Wisconsin Rapids
8. Janesville Parker
9. Oshkosh West
10. Sun Prairie

Division 2
1. Ashwaubenon
2. Waunakee
3. Kimberly
4. Menomonie
5. Waukesha West
6. Monona Grove
7. Cedarburg
8. Verona
9. Germantown
10. Milton

Division 3
1. Kewaskum
2. Green Bay Notre Dame
3. New Berlin Eisenhower
4. Wisconsin Lutheran
5. Madison Edgewood
6. Sheboygan Falls
7. Luxemburg-Casco
8. New Berlin West
9. Tomahawk
10 Waupun

Division 4
1. Evansville
2. Platteville
3. Appleton Xavier
4. Lodi
5. Lakeside Lutheran
6. Kewaunee
7. Gale-Ettrick-Trempealeau
8. Brodhead-Juda
9. Mayville
10. Ripon

Division 5
1. Wrightstown
2. Horicon
3. Lancaster
4. Pardeeville
5. Ladysmith
6. Somerset
7. Shoreland Lutheran
8. Valders
9. Random Lake
10. Grantsburg

Division 6
1. Edgar
2. Stratford
3. Pecatonica-Argyle
4. Fennimore
5. Eau Claire Regis
6. Racine Lutheran
7. Iola-Scandinavia
8. Abbotsford
9. Cedar Grove
10. Pittsville

Division 7
1. Stevens Point Pacelli
2. DeSoto
3. Hillsboro
4. Plum City
5. Hilbert
6. Eleva-Strum
7. Burlington Catholic Central
8. Gilman
9. Oshkosh Lourdes
10. Johnson Creek

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Friday night insight

I'm going to make this one brief, just because Notre Dame-Michigan is about to kick off.

We're one week shy of crossing the halfway mark, and there are only a few teams that have played at a consistent level since Week 1.

At the top of that list is Kewaskum. The Indians rolled again last night, as Casey Scheel threw for 148 yards in a 41-7 victory over Two Rivers. After Sheboygan Falls and Waupun lost last night, I'm starting to think Kewaskum could be the legit No. 1 team in Division 3.

Mayville was impressive as well. The Cardinals lost their first game of the year to a pretty good Brodhead-Juda team, but have rolled since then. I know that we've given a lot of pub to Matt Haass, but I was most impressed with the Mayville running attack against a fairly good Springs defense. Now, a large part of that success was because the Ledgers were guarding against the pass, but Michael Nied still broke some tackles. If they can keep that balance, I like their chances come playoff time.

Other than that, every team has had a hiccup so far this season. Campbellsport bounced back from a puzzling loss to New Holstein last week to edge Plymouth, 30-27, behind the running of Billy Mayer. Speaking of New Holstein, it's kind of hard to believe they are tied with Kewaskum for the conference lead. Two more EWC wins for the Huskies, and they are playoff-bound.

WLA came up with a big win on the road at Brown Deer. That was probably the most surprising result of the weekend. WLA is a young team, and they really grew up against the Falcons. With Waupun and Ripon looking beatable the last few weeks, I don't think we can overlook the Vikings as a contender in the East Central Flyway.

Finally, Fondy got a very important victory over Appleton East. There are no gimme-games in the FVA, but considering Appleton East hadn't won a game yet this season and Fondy plays Menasha and Oshkosh West the next two weeks, the victory will either keep the playoffs a possibility, or keep the Cardinals among the FVA's elite. I'm a bit surprised the running game hasn't fared too well lately, but quarterback Ben Anderson (9 of 11 for 177 yards and two TDs) is doing enough to get Fondy on the board.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Guess who is coming to town?

We had him on the cover of our prep football issue. We practically anointed him the player of the year before the season began. After he was "only" 11 of 21 for 115 yards in a 1-point loss to a pretty good Brodhead-Juda team, I said in a couple of radio interviews because of the preseason hype, everyone is focusing on stopping him. (Granted, we at The Reporter created most of that hype, but ignore that for now...)

The fact remains, Mayville quarterback Matt Haass is a darn good quarterback, and he'll be making an appearance in Fond du Lac on Friday night against Springs. It'll be my first time seeing him on the football field, and I've been looking forward to this one ever since I saw the schedule. Haass, at least stats-wise, is the top quarterback in this part of the state and has been especially efficient the last two weeks in wins over Campbellsport and Kettle Moraine Lutheran.

Springs is going to have its work cut out for it. The problem with defending a quarterback like Haass is because he can beat you in a couple of ways. You can't sit back in a zone because he'll pick it apart. Even though he's not very fast, you can't put on a heavy rush because he has a couple of tall wideouts, including Tyson Apfelbeck, that will win any jump ball or can burn their man deep. Also, Mayville has several good running backs that can do some damage if they catch the ball in the flat.

If you ask me, Springs' best defense is their offense. The Ledgers had a drive against WLA last week that was something like 16 plays, 45 yards and took 8 minutes off the clock.

***Blog intermission. Most media members enjoy a quick game because it allows more time to get our work done after the game. As a result, I am very superstitious when it comes to anyone mentioning how fast a game is going (or the weather), because, of course, that will annoy the time (or weather) gods, jinx everyone that would benefit from a quick game and pretty much bring the proceedings to a halt. No one, and I mean no one (man, woman or child), should mention anything about time, weather, overtime, anything that may annoy the time and weather gods. Well, last Friday, I was in the booth with a certain radio reporter that we'll call Justin H. Wait, that's too obvious. Let's call him J. Hall. He mentioned, midway through the second quarter, that the game was moving rather quickly. I cringed. It took the weather gods about 15 minutes to put together a freak lightning storm, and the time gods just laughed as we were handed a 90-minute weather delay. So you know who to blame for that one.

ANYWAYS, if Springs keeps the clock moving, it will limit the number of possessions for Haass. Add in a couple of big plays on defense, and that's your receipe for a Ledgers victory.

If you are a football fan and live in the Fond du Lac area, I highly recommend checking this one out.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Packers trade Gado

Not that this is a place for breaking Packers news, but I thought I'd tip my loyal readers off to the fact the Packers traded Samkon Gado to the Houston Texans for another running back.

It's a shame. Gado was one of the neat guys on the Packers roster. He spent the offseason volunteering at a Green Bay hospital so when he was done with football he could help the AIDS epidemic in his native Africa.

Obviously the Packers are concerned with winning ball games first but it's a shame that in the span of three days they picked up one of the NFL's worst human beings and traded one of its best.

This is some funny stuff

Well, this doesn't really have to do with the Fondy sports scene, the Wisconsin sports scene, or really sports in general. But it's still pretty funny.

There's a group in New York that calls itself "Improv Everywhere." Its goal is to make all of the world a stage. It's some funny stuff.

One guy, "Rob," decided he would get lost at a Yankee game. I won't spoil it for you, but he became more popular than Derek Jeter in the process.

Check it out.

Monday, September 11, 2006

The weekend that was

We're 1/3 of the way though the high school football season, and thanks to some Friday night lightning, it took a little while longer to get there.

There were some teams that made big statements this weekend, others that may have taken a step back and a couple of teams that picked up their first win of the year.

One of those teams that picked up its first win was Springs. I was there, 90-minute lightning delay and all. It was a game that the Ledgers dominated for all but about eight minutes, where it looked like WLA might steal one away. I still don't think that Springs is playing at a level they are capable of, but man, was coach Bob Hyland pumped after that one. I'm looking forward to their matchup with Mayville on Friday night. Defensive back Eric Pantojas had a great night against WLA, and he'll need another one to help keep Matt Haass and the Cardinals from tearing the Ledgers' defense apart.

How about New Holstein coming through with a big 31-14 victory over Campbellsport. The Cougars were one of my surprise teams early, but after they allowed a 97-yard touchdown run to Matt Preissner, that was kind of all she wrote for that one. New Holstein played a couple of good opponents in the preseason (Valders, Waupun) and it looks like the Huskies learned a few things from those games.

Other quick thoughts:

*I've gotta check out Lomira's John Weninger at some point. He's putting up nearly 200 rushing yards a game, and while the Lions have some other talented players, he's about the only one that's getting any positive yards.

*I'm a little surprised they are ranked where they are, but Kewaskum is playing like the No. 1 team in the state. While Manitowoc Roncalli isn't a playoff-caliber team, Kewaskum did what they were supposed to do and take care of business on Saturday afternoon to the tune of a 42-0 victory.

*It was good to see Laconia get a victory. The first two weeks they had the ball at the end of the game with a chance to tie or win, and fell short both times. Josh Tipton's 1-yard run finally got the job done for a very talented Spartans group.

Looking forward to Week 4, but in the meantime, I was wondering if anyone in the Fondy area knows a good place for wings. I'm in the mood for some wings and Monday Night Football. Leave a comment if you have a recommendation.

Also, you should be able to watch my spot on WFRV's High School Sports Xtra sometime today. It will be posted here. Check it out. Keep it away from children under 3 and women who are pregnant or who might become pregnant.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Friday night scores update

St. Mary's Springs 14, Winnebago Lutheran 7: Andy Grebe scored on a 32-yard screen pass with 1:17 left. The game was delayed by 90 minutes because of lightning.

Fond du Lac 14, Neenah 12: With quarterback Ben Anderson watching on the sideline with an injured shoulder, the Cardinals' Sam Provot blocked an extra point after Neenah's first touchdown and Kyle Duquaine stuffed the two-point conversion attempt after the second as Fondy held on in Neenah.

New Holstein at Campbellsport, no score

Laconia 26, Lomira 25

Deerfield 32, Markesan 0

Kettle Moraine Lutheran 12, Mayville 48: Matt Haass threw for 224 yards and four touchdowns.

Horicon 70, North Fond du Lac 20

Oakfield 27, Dodgeland 14

Ripon 55, Mauston 12

Waupun 30, Medford 23

WLA-Springs highlights Week 3 games

It's amazing to think that after tonight we'll be 1/3 of the way through the prep football season. It seems like only yesterday we were putting the finishing touches on our annual football preview issue. Before you know it, we'll be talking about playoffs, even if Jim Mora thinks that's a little insane.

Conference play begins tonight for all the teams in the Eastern Wisconsin Conference and all but one in the Wisconsin Flyway (or what I like to call the Wi-Fly, I'm hoping it catches on).

Fondy plays nothing but conference games until the postseason, so their fully ensconsed in the Fox Valley Association race. While the Cardinals don't desperately need a victory over Neenah tonight, they do need something positive on defense to carry them throughout the season. The Rockets have struggled on offense as of late, which hopefully will help give the Fondy defensive unit some confidence.

Ripon has to play a game after a loss for the first time since late in the 2004 season after a 45-21 loss to Sheboygan Falls. And while that game with the Falcons should give the Tigers character, tonight's game with Mauston should give them some confidence. Mauston was blown out last week by Waupun, 43-0.

But the game of the week, as far as, well, anyone is concerned is WLA vs. Springs. I'm a big fan of rivalry games, and I've been looking forward to this one for a while. Both teams have quarterback issues, but I'm sure both replacements will find a way to get the job done come Friday night. I'd look for Springs to have the advantage in this one, but WLA has won the last three.

I will be making the usual appearances on all the local radio stations, so be sure to listen in to those. Also, on Sunday night, I'll be appearing on WFRV's High School Sports Xtra with Burke Griffin. It's 13 feet and 600 pounds of pure, unalduterated high school sports talk, so you can't miss that. I'll be breaking down this weekend's big games as well as a rivalry game from my old stomping grounds — Oshkosh West vs. Oshkosh North.

If you really can't wait to hear what I have to say, you can click here for my conversation with Jason Mansmith of WRPN-AM 1600 for the Ripon pre-game show. WRPN has a great radio station and a pretty nice sports Web site to boot. Check it out.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Try a different kind of football this Friday night

Want a change of pace from your regular Friday night?

Head on out to the Fondy Soccer Complex on Friday night to see two of the state's best soccer teams meet in a nonconference battle.

Madison Memorial, the No. 2 team in the state, already owns a victory over powerhouse Milwaukee Marquette. Fondy, ranked No. 8, hasn't really been tested by any of the state's top teams yet but the Cardinals have blown everyone else away.

Fondy coach Greg Winkler said Friday was the only date he could get Memorial to come up to Fond du Lac.

It's unfortunate, because if it was any other night, even Saturday, I'd love to check that out.

But if anyone else is going and wants to give me a full report, feel free. I'll be at the WLA-Springs football game. Please don't throw eggs at me.

Monday, September 04, 2006

How I voted this week

As I said earlier, I'll post how I voted in the weekly AP poll. Also, like I said earlier, these rankings are somewhat meaningless. They don't help determine playoff seeding or anything like that... but they are good fodder for the water cooler.

Division 1
1. Stevens Point
2. Arrowhead
3. Wisconsin Rapids
4. Homestead
5. Hartford
6. Racine Park
7. Appleton North
8. Middleton
9. Kenosha Bradford
10. Milwaukee Marquette

Division 2
1. Ashwaubenon
2. Waunakee
3. Waukesha West
4. Menomonie
5. Kimberly
6. Monona Grove
7. Cedarburg
8. Verona
9. Germantown
10. Marshfield

Division 3
1. Sheboygan Falls
2. Waupun
3. Wisconsin Lutheran
4. Kewaskum
5. Green Bay Notre Dame
6. New Berlin Eisenhower
7. Rice Lake
8. Waukesha Catholic Memorial
9. Whitewater
10. Waupaca

Division 4
1. Evansville
2. Kewaunee
3. Platteville
4. Appleton Xavier
5. Brodhead/Juda
6. Gale-Ettrick-Trempealeau
7. Lakeside Lutheran
8. Mayville
9. Lodi
10. Prairie du Chien

Divison 5
1. Lancaster
2. Wrightstown
3. Valders
4. Horicon
5. Iowa-Grant
6. Pardeeville
7. St. Croix Falls
8. Ladysmith
9. Grantsburg
10. Marshall

Division 6
1. Edgar
2. Stratford
3. Pecatonica-Argyle
4. Fennimore
5. Eau Claire Regis
6. Shiocton
7. Lena
8. Loyal
9. Chippewa Falls McDonnell
10. Pittsville

Division 7
1. Stevens Point Pacelli
2. Gilman
3. DeSoto
4. Hillsboro
5. Plum City
6. Hilbert
7. Oshkosh Lourdes
8. Eleva-Strum
9. Necedah
10. Suring

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Springs QB possibly out for the season

St. Mary's Springs quarterback Mitchell Schneider aggravated a previously injured shoulder during Saturday's 26-14 loss to Verona at Fruth Field. Schneider was diving for a pass on defense when he landed awkwardly on his shoulder. He was removed from the game and coach Bob Hyland said afterward that he's probably done for the season.

It's a blow to a Springs team that was already inexperienced at the skill positions. What this does now is take away depth at other positions. John Kiefer is probably going to start at quarterback on Friday against WLA, meaning his split end spot will have to be filled by somebody else and so on.

Hyland said that he thought something like this may happen, so Springs was prepared for the worst. At least the big boys on the schedule are out of the way and Springs can face someone its own size (somewhat) in WLA.

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Friday night insight quickies

After a long, long night at work, I'm up bright and early (by my standards) to watch a little college football. But first I start mentally preparing for Notre Dame's first step toward its 12th national title and Brady Quinn wraps up the Irish's 8th Heisman Trophy, let's take a quick look back to Friday night.

Waupun's defense coming out strong: Say what you want about the level of competition, but Waupun has just rolled its first two opponents. The Warriors pitched another shutout last night and were up on Mauston 43-0 at halftime. These games are going to give the Warriors confidence heading into the conference season. Waupun received one first-place vote in the last Associated Press poll, and while that may be a stretch, they are sure looking like a state championship-caliber team thus far.

Where's the 'D'?: Fondy fans have to be a bit concerned with the team's defense in its first two games. The problem, as I see it, is one of depth. Fondy was missing some players at key positions Friday night and had others that were banged up. When you get behind by a few points, the natural need is to play those players more on offense to catch up. So when Josh Korb spent most of his time playing on offense last night, his defense suffered. The Cardinals will be a better football team once Paul Biolo is back on the field. Besides, Kimberly was a pretty darn good football team.

Haass lives up to the hype: After a shaky outing in Week 1, Mayville quarterback Matt Haass bounced back in a big way Friday night to throw for 292 yards in a 28-25 victory over Campbellsport. He completed 23 of 28 passes and had three touchdowns against a pretty good defense. He's got to be dealing with a lot of pressure, considering Mayville ditched its run-based offense last year to better utilize Haass's talents, only to finish 3-6 and miss the playoffs for the first time since 1990. I can't wait to see him play on Sept. 15 when Mayville comes to Fruth Field to take on Springs.

If only they were healthy: You got to feel for North Fondy. From what coach Nate Lehman has said, they just can't stay healthy. Injuries bit key players for the Orioles last night, who were up early on Ozaukee, 7-0, before they started dropping like flies. North Fondy will get a win at some point this year, and man, is it going to be a great thing for that program.

Friday, September 01, 2006

A quick note about our coverage

Some of you may have noticed our increased coverage on the Web and in Blink for high school football. I hope that you continue to log on to the Web site or pick up a copy of Blink, and then tell your friends about it.

Once again, tonight we will be updating the Web site. Remember to check back often, because I try to update it as much as possible. We also try to add highlights where we can.

I will be covering the Fond du Lac-Kimberly game, while Doug Whiteley will be covering the WLA-Random Lake game. I realize that these are the same teams we covered last week, but that's just the way the schedule worked out.

Until then, feel free to leave comments here. Let's get some discussion going about your favorite team.

A quick look at tonight's matchups

Was it just me, or did the last week fly by? It seems that it was yesterday we were getting ready, and now all of a sudden, we are on to Week 2.

Most teams don't begin conference play until next week, but there are still a handful of games that will speak volumes about where these teams are headed or what they need to work on.

I wish I could be in two places at once, because I'd love to see Ripon play Sheboygan Falls. I strongly believe that it was Ripon's 12-6 victory over Falls last year that was the springboard for its undefeated state championship season. That was the most intense, early-season nonconference game I have ever seen. I'd imagine tonight's game will be similar, although I'd look for Falls to break through and take this one.

Mayville and Campbellsport should be another good one to watch. Mayville got off to a rough start with a 22-21 loss against a very good Brodhead-Juda team in which it threw an interception deep in Brodhead territory late in the game. I'd look for Matt Haass to get back on track this week for the Cardinals, but Mayville is going to have to figure out how to slow down Campbellsport's Billy Mayer and Lance Schumacher, who just ran all over Fox Valley Lutheran last week.

The one conference game we have this week is the one I'll be covering. Fondy plays host to Kimberly in a battle of two teams that won their FVA openers last week. I was impressed with Fondy's offense. Ben Anderson has a great touch on his pass and I like the way the Cardinals were able to move the ball. I'd like to see Fondy try a little more through the air this week. Kimberly has a big defensive line, and Fondy might need to use the pass to open up the run instead of the other way around.

As for the other games, North Fondy plays host to Ozaukee. Remember that you heard it here... North Fondy will win. I've got a feeling about the Orioles this weekend and I think they'll get it done.

I'll be making the radio rounds tomorrow. I'll be on the Coach's Playbook, which airs on WFDL-AM 1170 from 5-6 p.m. I'll also make an appearance on Ripon's pre-game show on WRPN-AM 1600. That begins at 6:30. And depending on how the Packers game goes, I might make an appearance on KFIZ's pre-game show for the Fondy game (AM 1450). Or if you really, really want to hear my voice you can call my number at work and listen to my voice mail.