Lightning aiming for second win
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Rick Devereux
After Sage Hill School had a record-setting game against Midway
Baptist last week, Coach Tom Monarch is happy with the team’s
performance but would still like to see individual improvement Friday
against Villanova Prep.
“We played a terrible first quarter [against the Patriots],” he
said. “Once we settled down and made some adjustments, we played much
better. Hopefully that will carry over to next week.”
Sophomore running back Don Ayres rushed for 179 yards and two
touchdowns, setting a new Lightning single-game rushing record, and
junior Keya Manshadi rushed for 98 yards with two scores. Manshadi
also added two interceptions for touchdowns to give Sage Hill the
42-14 win, marking the largest margin of victory in school history.
Monarch singled out the play of his younger athletes as ones who
contributed to the win.
“I thought [freshman quarterback] Jamie McGee played extremely
well. He made some mistakes, but he will improve,” Monarch said.
“[Freshman inside linebacker] Dylan Milstein had some big hits and
played really well.”
Monarch said he needs the underclassmen -- Sage Hill (1-0) has
freshmen or sophomores at seven different starting positions -- to
continue to play well for the Lightning to put together their first
two-game winning streak since the first two games in the program’s
history in 2002.
Villanova Prep (1-0) beat Desert Christian, 49-12, last week
behind the running of Nick Scolari (146 yards, three touchdowns) and
Sean Forster (132 yards, one TD).
Monarch said he will prepare for the Wildcats in the same way he
prepared for the Patriots.
“Just like the Midway game, we want to force them to pass to our
secondary,” he said. “If we can make them one-dimensional by taking
away their running game and forcing them to throw into the strength
of our defense, I think we will win.”
When Sage Hill has the ball, Monarch is expecting the defenders to
key on Ayres and Manshadi, which could leave other play-makers open.
“It doesn’t take Einstein to realize we need to get the ball in
[Manshadi’s] hands. We knew we wanted to put it in his hands from day
one,” Monarch said. “But we have a unique team where [sophomore wide
receiver] Braden Ross might be the one with the huge game. Or Ayers.
Or McGee. You just never know.”
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