Indians’ trying day ends poorly
- Share via
It was a bad situation that translated into a horrendous start and,
ultimately, dissipated into a dreadful showing.
After dealing with fires, a scheduling change and even taekwondo
hassles, the Burroughs High football team couldn’t deal with host
Chaminade, falling in dismal fashion, 41-0, in Saturday night’s
nonleague contest at Chaminade High.
“I told the kids they need to get through the adversity and come
out and play. They weren’t able to,” said Indians’ Coach Keith Knoop,
who watched his team fall to 2-2 after incurring an unfavorable set
of events surrounding the week-four contest.
Due to fires and unsafe air conditions near Chaminade, the game,
originally scheduled for Friday, was postponed until Saturday.
On Saturday, the circus-like atmosphere, which featured a fire in
Burbank, as well as a taekwondo event at Burroughs High that resulted
in some of the Indian players arriving late -- because at least one
player couldn’t find parking at his own school -- was an odd preamble
to a lackluster effort.
“Our main goal with these guys is you can’t come out flat. They’re
becoming adults pretty soon and they need to realize they have a job
to do,” said Knoop, who just a week earlier saw his squad narrowly
edged by St. Francis -- the second-ranked team in CIF Southern
Section Division III -- by three points. “They need to learn how to
separate other things in life from this.”
That clearly didn’t happen on Saturday.
Chaminade (3-1) scored on all four of its first-half possessions,
building a 24-0 halftime edge, while the Indians struggled to gain
just 60 total yards and three first downs in the span.
In all, Burroughs had 116 total yards, as the offense struggled in
every facet.
Standout running back Thomas Kyle was bottled up to the tune of 48
yards in 16 carries -- 25 of those yards coming in the fourth quarter
against Eagle reserves. Quarterback Tony Banuelos, Jr., returning
after a week’s hiatus due to a knee injury, went just five of 18 for
41 yards.
Chaminade, which lost a squeaker, 14-13, to Burroughs last season,
proved to be far too worthy an adversary for the Indians to have an
off-night.
“They were faster than us,” Knoop said. “Tonight, they were more
physical than us.”
Leading the faster and more physical charge was Eagle quarterback
Kyle Thompson. Thompson snuck in two one-yard keepers for a 14-0
first-quarter lead and also tossed 43- and 16-yard scoring strikes.
He finished with 21 yards in seven carries and 167 yards on 10-of-15
passing.
In the second half, the Burroughs defense did wake up, highlighted
by two Joe Wiggen sacks and a David Endler interception. But the
Indians’ offense remained in slumber, as Chaminade forced all three
Burroughs turnovers in the half and also blocked a punt to put the
game far out of reach and start the clock running.
The Indians will look to rebound with their final nonleague game
of the year when they travel to face a winless Crescenta Valley at
7p.m. Friday at Memorial Field.
Burroughs begins Foothill League play Oct. 14 in a home game
against defending champion Valencia.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.