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SCORES,BOXSCORES FOOTBALL
TOP 20 No. 8 Osbourn 56, Forest Park 32 No. 13 Broad Run 21, Fauquier 0 No. 14 Dunbar at Dunbar (Chicago) Glen Oak 42, No. 17 H.D. Woodson 2 No. 20 Battlefield 14, Lake Taylor 6
DISTRICT Ballou 38, Theodore Roosevelt 0
VIRGINIA
Briar Woods 10, Millbrook 8 Loudoun Valley 57, Dominion 7 Sherando 35, Park View 32 Tuscarora (Va.) 33, Woodgrove 21 E.C. Glass at Franklin County Eastern View at Culpeper Massaponax at Spotsylvania Mountain View at James Monroe Patrick Henry-Roanoke at Hidden Valley Petersburg at Halifax County Potomac (Va.) at Gar-Field Strasburg at Warren County
PRIVATE
Gilman at Spalding Maryland School for the Deaf at Pallotti
NONLEAGUE Carroll 28, Coolidge 0 Friendship Collegiate 63, Virginia Homescool 0 Martinsburg (W.Va.) 27, Stonewall Jackson 20 Potomac Falls 14, Jefferson (W.Va.) 7 Berkeley Springs (W.Va.) at Clarke County GW-Danville at Hillside Loudoun County at Musselman (W.Va.) Washington at Hedgesville (W.Va.)
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
SATURDAY McKinley at Gonzaga, 12 noon Model at Indiana School for Deaf, 7 St. John’s at Calvert Hall, 1 St. Mary’s Ryken at Mount Zion Baptist, 1 Wilson at Boardman (Ohio), 4
SUNDAY Good Counsel at St. Xavier (Ohio), 3
FRIDAY’S SCORES BOYS' SOCCER PRIVATE Field at Maret O'Connell at Sidwell Friends Rockbridge at Key FIELD HOCKEY VIRGINIA South County 2, Hayfield 0 Chantilly 1, Oakton 0 Langley 3, Hayfield 1 Oakton 3, Jefferson 2 (OT) South County 6, Washington-Lee 1 T.C. Williams 2, Chantilly 1 T.C. Williams 5, Edison 0 Westfield 2, Langley 1 Westfield 5, Washington-Lee 0 OTHERS W.T. Woodson 2, Bishop Sullivan 1 VOLLEYBALL VIRGINIA Tuscarora (Va.) def. Handley, 25-12, 29-27, 25-14 PRIVATE St. John's vs. Holton-Arms at Holton-Arms
TOP20
NO. 20 BATTLEFIELD 14, LAKE TAYLOR 6 Battlefield (1-0) ................... 7 0 0 7 — 14 Lake Taylor (0-1) .................. 0 6 0 0 — 6
B—Jackson 1 run (Hoepker kick) LT—Walton 2 run (kick failed) B—Beathard 5 pass from Swingle (Hoepker kick)
DCIAA
BALLOU 38, THEODORE ROOSEVELT 0 Highlights: Senior Darren Holbrook returned a punt 50 yards for a touchdown, returned a kickoff 60 yards and had 126 yards receiving as Ballou won its opener. Ballou defensive tackle Lamonte Clark had five tackles and an interception. Theodore Roosevelt (0-1) .... 0 0 0 0 — 0 Ballou (1-0)........................... 8 6 8 16 — 38 B — Holmes 7 pass from Edwards (Holbrook pass
from Edwards) B—Holbrook 50 punt return (pass failed) B — Crawford 19 pass from Edwards (Holbrook pass
from Edwards) B—Coleman 8 run (Edwards run) B—Edwards 6 run (Holbrook pass from Edwards) RUSHING LEADERS — B: Edwards 6-55, Holbrook
6-53.
PASSING LEADERS—B: Edwards 17-28-1 304. RECEIVINGLEADERS—B: Holbrook 4-126, Dent 5-60, Bennett 3-42.
NONLEAGUE
TUSCARORA (VA.) 33,WOODGROVE 21 Woodgrove (0-1, 0-0)........... 0 0 7 14 — 21 Tuscarora (Va.) (1-0, 0-0) .... 6 14 7 6 — 33
T—Molina 10 run (kick failed) T—Stinger 18 run (kick failed) T—Molina 13 run (Johnson pass from Mends) T—Carpenter 29 pass fromMends (Prendergast kick) W—Ntangtang 4 run (Warfel kick) T—Holoman 77 fumble return (kick failed) W—Workman 5 run (Warfel kick) W—Reed 16 run (Warfel kick) RUSHING LEADERS — W: Reed 13-102. T: Molina
15-103, Mends 10-71, Stinger 7-53. PASSING LEADERS — W: Workman 13-25-1 150. T:
Mends 4-9-0 105, Dietrich 0-1-0 0. RECEIVING LEADERS—W: Miller 3-25, Baker 4-64. T: Holoman 2-42, Carpenter 2-63.
OTHERS
POTOMAC FALLS 14, JEFFERSON (W.VA.) 7 Highlights: Marquis Vasciannie scored the go-ahead touchdown on a 2-yard burst to the end zone with six minutes remaining, lifting the Panthers in their season opener. Potomac Falls ....................... 0 7 0 7 — 14 Jefferson (W.Va.) ................ 0 0 7 0 — 7
PF—K Bulger 50 pass from Fischetti (Frost kick) PF—Vasciannie 2 run (Frost kick)
CARROLL 28, COOLIDGE 0
Carroll (1-0) .......................... 0 7 14 7 — 28 Coolidge (0-1)....................... 0 0 0 0 — 0
AC—Haden 16 run (Membreno kick) AC—Thompson 29 run (kick failed) AC—Hall-Gibbons 5 fumble return (Jackson run) AC—Haden 25 run (Membreno kick) RUSHINGLEADERS—AC: Jackson 13-98,Haden8-94.
C: Dickens 7-51. PASSING LEADERS — AC: Brown 1-3-1 4. C: Strong
2-2-0 28, Hutchins 0-8-1 0. RECEIVING LEADERS — AC: Haden 1-4. C: Misher 1-14, Pratt 1-14.
FRIENDSHIP COLLEGIATE 63, VIRGINIA HOMESCOOL 0
Virginia Homescool (0-1) ..... 0 0 0 0 — 0 Friendship Collegiate (1-0) .. 30 12 7 14 — 63
FC—Kitrell 34 pass from Goings (kick failed) FC—Stanback 26 fumble return (kick failed) FC—Reid 33 run (Reid run) FC—Hayes 30 run (C Harris run) FC—Fisher 19 pass from Goings (kick failed) FC—Shepherdson 26 run (kick failed) FC—Shepherdson 9 run (R Davis run) FC—Watson 5 run (R Davis kick) FC—Coffee 3 run (R Davis kick) RUSHING LEADERS—FC: Hayes 4-95, Watson 4-79. PASSING LEADERS—FC: Goings 3-3-0 106. RECEIVING LEADERS—FC: Bradsher 2-56.
NEXT WEEK’S SCHEDULE
Thursday FOOTBALL TOP 20 No. 7 Robinson at T.C. Williams, 5
No. 14 Dunbar at McKinley, 7
No. 20 Battlefield at Potomac (Va.), 7:30
VIRGINIA Hayfield at Marshall, 7:30
Jefferson at Herndon, 7:30
South County at Chantilly, 7:30
South Lakes at Falls Church, 7:30
Wakefield at Lee, 7:30
Washington-Lee at McLean, 7:30
West Potomac at Mount Vernon, 7:30
West Springfield at Edison, 7:30
OTHERS Dominion at Ballou, 7
Spingarn at Edmondson-Westside, 7
Wilson at Yorktown, 7:30
Friday FOOTBALL TOP 20 No. 3 Stone Bridge at No. 12 West- field, 7:30
Magruder at No. 4 Damascus, 6:30
Langley at No. 5 Lake Braddock, 7:30
No. 6 Quince Orchard at Kennedy, 6:30
No. 8 Osbourn at Brooke Point, 7:30
No. 9 River Hill at Hammond, 7
No. 10 Old Mill at Arundel, 6:30
No. 13 Broad Run at Heritage, 7
Forest Park at No. 15 Colonial Forge, 7:30
No. 17 H.D. Woodson at Friendship Colle- giate, 7
No. 18 Sherwood at Wootton, 6:30
Carroll blanks Coolidge as coach’s debut draws plenty of attention
BY ALAN GOLDENBACH
Cameras followed Natalie Randolph as she emerged from a long tunnel leading from Coolidge’s locker room onto the football field. A boom micro- phone hovered over her head as she coached her first game for the Colts. A news conference followed with more than two dozen media members asking her what it meant and how it felt for a woman to lead a Washing- ton-area football team for the first time. Meantime, there was another sparkling debut on the other sideline. Carroll freshman run- ning back JonathanHaden—the youngest of five brothers who have all excelled at football — rushed for 94 yards and a pair of touchdowns to lead the Lions to a 28-0 victory before an estimat- ed 3,500 at Coolidge, spoiling Randolph’s ballyhooed entrance into the coaching profession. While Haden’s play on the
field was the most captivating, eyes were fixed on the home
team’s sideline, curious at how Randolph would approach a reg- ular-season game. The reality — she approached it just like any coach would. She was her typical mild-mannered self, dressed in a bright white T-shirt and fresh- pressed khaki shorts matching the rest of her staff. When the public address an-
nouncer bellowed moments be- fore kickoff, “The Natalie Ran- dolph regime has begun,” the star in the spotlight didn’t break stride, speaking into her headset, peering at the play sheet clutched in her left hand. “This is not normal,” Ran-
dolph said afterward, explaining the uniqueness of the game’s coverage and anticipation, “but it’s the reality of the situation. You have to deal with it. “You have to keep it in per-
spective. It’s just a football game.. . .I told them to ignore it and play football.” When asked afterward how
the game differed from those when she was an assistant coach at H.D.Woodson three years ago, Randolph wryly retorted, “All of y’all,” referring to the reporters surrounding her. “That’s the only difference.” Fans began arriving more
than two hours before kickoff – even before Carroll’s bus pulled
VIRGINIAAAFOOTBALL Molina helps Tuscarora get off to winning start
Junior scores twice, has key interception to pace Huskies
BY PAUL TENORIO There were plenty of firsts in
the inaugural game betweenTus- carora andWoodgrove, Loudoun County’s two newest schools, in Leesburg on Friday night, and running back Cameron Molina’s name was included in many of them. Thefirstplayfromscrimmage:
Molina for five yards. The first touchdown in Tuscarora history: Molina’s 10-yard run up themid- dle. The first interception: Moli- na on the goal line to stop a Woodgrove drive. The first 100- yard rusher: Molina with 103 yards on 15 carries in little more than two quarters ofwork. And, of course, Tuscarora’s
first win, a 33-21 victory led by Molina’s two-touchdown perfor- mance. “Once I got the ball in my
Printed using recycled fiber.
hands I just dowhat I can to help the team win,” said the junior, who had both of his cramping calveswrapped in ice to showfor the do-it-all performance. “So it feels great.” WhileMolina led theway, Tus-
carora (1-0) appeared to be the sharper overall team of the two programs—especially inthe first half. Athalftime,Tuscaroraled20-0
and had limitedWoodgrove (0-1) to just 56 total yards of offense. In the second half, however, the Wolverines made more ad-
justments and found the end zone three times. Junior running back Matthew Reed led the way with 102 yards on 13 carries and one touchdown. But Tuscarora stayed in front
behind its big-play prowess on both sides of the ball. Perhaps no play ended up be-
ball and returned it 77 yards for a touchdown to open up an advan- tage Woodgrove could not over- come. “Instinct,man,”Holomansaid.
“I had to pick it up and go. Couldn’t let the other teamcatch us, we needed a big play, so I delivered.” The victory was the first for
RICHARD A. LIPSKI FOR THE WASHINGTON POST CameronMolina (103 yards rushing) eludes threeWoodgrove players in both schools’ inaugural game.
ingmore important than the one made by Tuscarora junior Chris Holoman in the fourth quarter. WiththeHuskies leadingby20
and Woodgrove driving to the Tuscarora 25-yardline, aHuskies defender forced a fumble that bounced into Holoman’s path. The linebacker scooped up the
Tuscarora Coach Mike Burnett since leaving Broad Run, where he won consecutive Virginia AA Division 4 championships the past two seasons. Even with the win in the program’s first game, Burnettmaintained the same at- titude he had down the road in Ashburn. “We never dwell very long on
whatwasbehindus, that’skindof our philosophy,” Burnett said. “Enjoywhat’sbehindusbutwe’re looking right now at areas we need to improve on and there’s a lot of them. “I always tell the kids enjoy it
tonight with your friends and families, and tomorrow we get back towork.”
tenoriop@washpost.com
into the Coolidge parking lot.But whenHaden stepped off the bus, and saw the media throng, and the bleachers that eventually filled to near-capacity by the end of the first quarter, he wasn’t the slightest bit fazed. “I know what hype is,” Haden
said, recalling when he watched his oldest brother, Joe, an All- Met at Friendly who went on to play for Florida in the 2009 BCS NationalChampionshipGameat Dolphins Stadium in Miami. “I was sitting five rows back for the national championship game. That’s hype.” The hype Friday was centered
around Coolidge, which moved the ball early but was unable to get on the scoreboard. After Keith Dickens broke for a 35- yard run on the game’s first play from scrimmage, Carroll eventu- ally stopped Coolidge at the Li- ons 3-yard line. Coolidge’s second drive ended
on an interception by junior Duane Thompson at the Carroll 13. The Lions put together a seven-play drive, capped by Ha- den scoring from 16 yards out on an inside handoff. Cutting from left to right, he hit the hole fast and reached the end zone un- touched. Coolidge senior quarterback Chris Strong was one of many
CARROLL28,COOLIDGE0 Officially: The lead official for the
game was Toni Morgan, who works many District games, and also refer- eedsomeof Randolph’s games when she played for the D.C. Divas.
Finally: Wanda Oates, who was appointed Ballou’s football coach in 1985, only to have the job taken away from her 24 hours later due to pres- sure from other coaches, sat in bleachers. “It’s toobadthat it took25 years after what I went through, but I’m happy to be here and see Natalie leading them.”
players to go down with severe cramping (Strong’s affected his left calf), which took him out of the game early in the second quarter and the Colts’ offense could not adjust without him. Carroll, meantime, took a 13-0
lead on the opening drive of the second half, when Thompson scored on a 29-yard run. The Lions added another score with three minutes left in the quarter when E.J. Norris
Coolidge’s JaymeHutchins, forc- ing a fumble. Tre-Hall Gibbons scooped up the ball at the 5 and ran it in. the two-point conver- sion made it 21-0. Haden closed out the scoring
midway through the fourth quarter on a 24-yard run.
goldenbacha@washpost.com
THETOP20 FOOTBALL
1 Good Counsel
Sun.: at St. Xavier (0-0), 3 2 DeMatha
Sat.: Loyola Blakefield (0-0), 4:30 3
Stone Bridge
Fri.: at Westfield (0-0), 7:30 4 Damascus
Fri.: Magruder (0-0), 6:30 5
Lake Braddock
Fri.: Langley (0-0), 7:30 6
Quince Orchard
Fri.: at Kennedy (0-0), 6:30 7
Robinson
Thu.: at T.C. Williams (0-0), 5 8
Osbourn
Last night: Def. Forest Park, 56-32 9
River Hill
Fri.: at Hammond (0-0), 7 10 Old Mill
Fri.: at Arundel (0-0), 6:30 11 Douglass
Sept. 4.: Central (0-0), 2 12 Westfield
Fri.: Stone Bridge (0-0), 7:30 13 Broad Run
Last night: Def. Fauquier, 21-0 14 Dunbar
sacked
Last night:: at Dunbar (Chicago), late 15 Colonial Forge
Fri.: Forest Park (0-1), 7:30 16 Eleanor Roosevelt
Sept. 4: Bladensburg (0-0), 1 17 H.D. Woodson
Last night: Lost to Glen Oak (Ohio), 42-2 18 Sherwood
Fri.: at Wootton (0-0), 6:30 19 Broadneck
Sat.: at Severna Park (0-0), 1 20 Battlefield
Last night: Def. Lake Taylor, 14-6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 1-0
“It’s just a football game,” Coolidge CoachNatalie Randolph said of her debut. “I told them to ignore [the media attention] and play football.” NONLEAGUEFOOTBALL
Colts come up empty in Randolph’s debut
SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 2010
ALLMETSPORTS.COM: Your home for com- plete high school coverage, including sto- ries, photo galleries, video and stats.
JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST
TUSCARORA33, WOODGROVE21
Another first: The contest was the
first-ever high school football game played on turf in Loudoun County.
Loyal to coach: Broad Run alum-
nus Kenny McAdow, a captain of the Spartans’ first state title team, paced the sideline at Tuscarora. McAdow chose to be present for his former coaches and said he would visit Broad Run, which was hosting Fau- quier, after the Tuscarora game.
NF407 1x.75
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