Rocky Mount High School | Archive | November, 2015

Gryphons beat Eden Morehead on final offensive play, advance to first 3-A regional final since 2008

Telegram photo / Adam Jennings / Rocky Mount High running back Tyrell Forbes, center, runs the ball through the Morehead defense Friday during the NCHSAA 3-A third round playoffs game between Rocky Mount High and Morehead on Friday at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Adam Jennings /
Rocky Mount High running back Tyrell Forbes, center, runs the ball through the Morehead defense Friday during the NCHSAA 3-A third round playoffs game between Rocky Mount High and Morehead on Friday at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Adam Jennings / Rocky Mount High running back Nick Bynum reacts after scoring a game-winning touchdown with four seconds left in the fourth quarter of the NCHSAA 3-A third round playoffs game between Rocky Mount High and Morehead on Friday at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Adam Jennings /
Rocky Mount High running back Nick Bynum reacts after scoring a game-winning touchdown with four seconds left in the fourth quarter of the NCHSAA 3-A third round playoffs game between Rocky Mount High and Morehead on Friday at Rocky Mount High School.

 

When Rocky Mount High’s season hinged on a mere two yards, there was no question where the ball was going.

The Gryphons faced a 4th-and-goal from Eden Morehead’s two-yard line with 6.8 seconds remaining in Friday’s 3-A third round playoffs game, and the entire Rocky Mount High huddle in its third and final timeout was in agreement: they would run ’25 Belly,’ a simple handoff up the middle.

Nick Bynum took the handoff and found the seam exactly where it was supposed to be to score the game-winning touchdown with four seconds remaining for a 35-31 win, sending Rocky Mount High (12-2) to the Eastern Regional Final at top-seeded Eastern Alamance next Friday night.

“We all called that play together, and as soon as we did, we knew we would score,” Bynum said. “It had worked all night, so there was no question in our minds that it would get it done.”

Bynum’s touchdown run, his fourth of the night, completed a 14-play, 86-yard drive that started with 4:07 remaining and the Gryphons trailing by three.

Rocky Mount High’s defense got only its second stop of the entire night by forcing Eden Morehead (10-4) quarterback Will Dabbs, who gave them fits, to miss throws on 3rd-and-7 and 4th-and-7 plays from the Gryphons’ 14; a first down likely would have put Rocky Mount High away.

“It was a tough night on defense, and we kind of had a feeling that it might be coming in,” Rocky Mount High coach Jason Battle said. “But the most encouraging thing to me was that when they needed a stop the most, they got it. Nothing really rattled (Morehead) all night.”

But given the way Rocky Mount High’s offense had executed much of the evening, it felt like one more stop – Detrell Revis intercepted Dabbs on Morehead’s opening drive, in Rocky Mount High territory – was all that would be required.

Eden Morehead scored one of its touchdowns on a long kickoff return by Jadakiss Jumper in the first quarter, and the 10th-seeded Panthers took advantage of Charlie Williams’ fumble on the opening kickoff of the second half to score a touchdown off a short field.

The Panthers’ offense had converted all six of its fourth down attempts, from one, seven, eight, one, and four yards, and kicked a 28-yard field goal for a 31-22 lead early in the fourth quarter on another fourth down.

But with Eden Morehead driving as the clock ticked towards four minutes, Rocky Mount High ratcheted up its pass rush, and Alex Henderson, Artavious Richardson and Sherrod Greene, who played much of the fourth quarter with a left shoulder injury, got in Dabbs’ face up the middle to force the fourth-down incompletion.

“That’s been their M.O. pretty much the entire playoffs, where they kept finding ways to convert on third and fourth downs,” Battle said. “It can be demoralizing but it wasn’t anything we hadn’t seen them do before.”

Rocky Mount High took over at its own 14, and Tyrell Forbes picked up a first down with two runs. Forrest Bell then bought time by scrambling to his left and was able to find Bynum near the left sideline. Bynum stayed in bounds and picked up 28 yards, into Morehead territory.

Bynum picked up 15 on the next play, but a 1-yard gain on 3rd-and-3 set up a 4th-and-2 from the Panthers’ 24 with less than 90 seconds to play. Bynum took a handoff off left tackle and picked up 5 to keep the Gryphons’ season alive.

A false start pushed Rocky Mount High back to a 2nd-and-13 situation, but Tyrell Forbes sprinted for 15 yards off the left side, giving the Gryphons 1st-and-goal from the 7.

Bynum got four on first down, before back-to-back short gains, including a play that was blown dead – perhaps for a Rocky Mount High fumble that the Gryphons fell on – though Bynum ended up standing in the end zone, away from the pile.

That set up the deciding fourth down for Bynum’s heroics. The senior fullback’s run set off raucous celebrations in the Rocky Mount High bleachers and quieted an impressive Eden Morehead contingent that had traveled from nearly three hours away to see an unlikely third-round team. The Panthers beat No. 2 seed Havelock in the second round last week.

Battle was asked after Friday’s game if it was the most enjoyable win in his five-year tenure.

“I’d guess so, yeah, now that I think about it,” Battle said. “I’ve enjoyed every moment with these guys. But tonight was pretty special, yeah.”

Rocky Mount High 35

Eden Morehead 31

EM          7    14    7    3    –    31

RM          7    8    7    13    –    35

First Quarter

RM – Nick Bynum 31 run (Chase Miller kick), 4:15

EM – Jadakiss Jumper 77 kickoff return (Kevin Jauregi kick), 4:06

Second Quarter

RM – Bynum 1 run (Forrest Bell run), 11:35

EM – Isaiah Broadnax 9 pass from Will Dabbs (2-point pass failed), 4:48

EM – Ben Bullins 1 run (pass good), 0:25

Third Quarter

EM – Dabbs 1 run (Jauregui kick), 8:19

RM – Bynum 21 run (Miller kick), 7:08

Fourth Quarter

EM – Jauregui 28 FG, 11:55

RM – Tyrell Forbes 19 run (kick missed), 9:15

RM – Bynum 2 run (Miller kick), 0:04

EMRM 19    First downs…………..18 30–98    Rushes-yards…41–308 204    Passing yards……….142 18–29–1    Passes…………….7–7–0 302    Total offense………..450 2–1    Fumbles-Lost……….2–1 3–30    Penalties-Yards…..13–98

Individual Statistics

Rushing – EM: Will Dabbs 20–91; Mike Jones 3–12; Daunte King 2–(-1); Ben Bullins 2–1; Isaiah Broadnax 3–(-5). RM: Nick Bynum 23–177; Tyrell Forbes 9–79; BJ Sanders 5–35; Forrest Bell 3–14; Sherrod Greene 1–3.

Passing – EM: Dabbs 18–29–1, 204. RM: Bell 7–7–0, 142.

Receiving – EM: Mike Jones 11–127; Jadakiss Jumper 4–44; Kyle Corum 2–29; Broadnax 2–18. RM: Bynum 2–45; Chris Richardson 1–35; KK Edwards 1–17; Jaclayton Freeman 1–13; Tyrell Forbes 1–13.

 

By FOSTER LANDER

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Gryphons’ strong second half pushes them into 3-A third round

Telegram photo / Abbi O'Leary / Rocky Mount High School's Nick Bynum celebrates after running into the endzone for a touchdown Friday during their game against South Johnston High School at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Abbi O’Leary /
Rocky Mount High School’s Nick Bynum celebrates after running into the endzone for a touchdown Friday during their game against South Johnston High School at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Abbi O'Leary / Rocky Mount High School's B.J. Sanders runs the ball through the South Johnston High School defense Friday during their game at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Abbi O’Leary /
Rocky Mount High School’s B.J. Sanders runs the ball through the South Johnston High School defense Friday during their game at Rocky Mount High School.

 

Rocky Mount High, for better or worse, has been a second-half football team all season, and especially in recent weeks.

The Gryphons have managed to overcome their first-half struggles all  year, and while it might not be the ideal way to handle business, Rocky Mount High just keeps winning.

That was the case again on Friday night in the second round of the 3-A playoffs, as the Gryphons led South Johnston by three at halftime but pulled away from the 11th-seeded Trojans after the break for a 34-20 victory and a berth in the third round.

Rocky Mount High will host No. 10 seed Eden Morehead, which upset second-seeded Havelock, 42-35, on Friday night.

“We need to come out and start much faster than we’ve been doing,” Gryphons coach Jason Battle said. “But, we did a great job of competing (Friday) even after we made mistakes, and we did what we had to do in the second half.”

Rocky Mount High intercepted South Johnston quarterbacks Deparis Patterson and Landen Lockamy three times – Detrell Revis notched two and Aaron Parker intercepted a deep ball, his third in two weeks – to stymie a Trojans offense that had been effective in moving the football both through the air and on the ground.

The Gryphons’ defense came up with two crucial stops in the second half, each time forcing a turnover on downs after they had been put in difficult spots by the Rocky Mount High offense.

First, after the Gryphons went for a 4th-and-10 from their own 32 and had a screen pass batted down, the Trojans went backward with a holding penalty and could not convert on a 4th-and-11 pass.

One possession later, though, Gryphons quarterback Forrest Bell was intercepted, and the Trojans returned the ball inside Rocky Mount High territory, but Lockamy threw three incompletions to give it right back.

“That’s the difference between a good and a great defense,” Gryphons linebacker Alex Henderson said. “The ones who can get off the field in spots like that and pick their offense up are what help us win games like that.”

Rocky Mount High’s passing offense awoke from its weeks-long slumber. Bell was able to connect on several deep passes and had one more erased by a drop, and the Gryphons’ screen passing game clicked. Bell’s lone touchdown pass of the night, on the opening drive of the second half, was on a screen to Jaclayton Freeman.

“I think the balance definitely helped us (on offense) (Friday),” Gryphons running back Nick Bynum said.

At this point, it’s survive-and-advance, and the Gryphons will play past Thanksgiving.

“I want the kids to enjoy this moment,” Battle said.

Rocky Mount High 34
South Johnston 20
SJ       0     7    7    6    –    20
RM     7     3    14    10    –    34
First Quarter
RM – Nick Bynum 34 run (Chase Miller kick), 2:35
Second Quarter
RM – Miller 25 FG, 9:15
SJ – Caeleb Robinson 4 run (Yovani Herrera kick), 4:26
Third Quarter
RM – Jaclayton Freeman 33 pass from Forrest Bell (Miller kick), 10:54
SJ – Deparis Patterson 12 run (Herrera kick), 6:02
RM – B.J. Sanders 4 run (Miller kick), 5:14
Fourth Quarter
RM – Bynum 7 run (Miller kick), 4:49
RM – Miller 27 FG, 1:23
SJ – Kavante Johnson 89 run (run failed), 1:04
SJRM
13    First downs…………14
34–196    Rushes-yards…36–188
164    Passing yards………159
11–27–3    Passes…………..7–12–1
360    Total offense……….347
1–1    Fumbles-Lost…….2–2
11–105    Penalties-Yards…8–65
Individual Statistics
Rushing – SJ: Kavante Johnson 22–170; Deparis Patterson 5–16; Caeleb Robinson 4–6; Landen Lockamy 2–11; Fabian McDonald 1–(-7). RM: Nick Bynum 15–109; B.J. Sanders 9–33; Tyrell Forbes 6–27; Deangelo Collins 3–15; Sherrod Greene 2–12; Forrest Bell 1–(-8).
Passing – SJ: Patterson 7–13–0, 103; Lockamy 4–14–0, 61. RM: Bell 7–12–1, 159.
Receiving – SJ: Javonte Smith 3–74; McDonald 3–40; Sharod Bailey 3–25; Patterson 1–6; Johnson 1–29. RM: KK Edwards 2–68; Jaclayton Freeman 2–43; Chris Richardson 2–35; Bynum 1–13.

By FOSTER LANDER

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Gryphons defense makes adjustments to defeat Burlington Williams

Telegram photo / Adam Jennings / Rocky Mount High cornerback Aaron Parker intercepts a pass intended for Burlington Williams wide receiver Sydney Mcadoo on Friday during the NCHSAA 3-A first round playoffs game at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Adam Jennings /
Rocky Mount High cornerback Aaron Parker intercepts a pass intended for Burlington Williams wide receiver Sydney Mcadoo on Friday during the NCHSAA 3-A first round playoffs game at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Adam Jennings / Rocky Mount High running back Tyrell Forbes, left, runs the ball as Burlington Williams linebacker John Ange Kernodle makes the tackle Friday during the NCHSAA 3-A first round playoffs game at Rocky Mount High School.

Telegram photo / Adam Jennings /
Rocky Mount High running back Tyrell Forbes, left, runs the ball as Burlington Williams linebacker John Ange Kernodle makes the tackle Friday during the NCHSAA 3-A first round playoffs game at Rocky Mount High School.

 

Rocky Mount High did its due diligence in scouting Burlington Williams, and the Gryphons thought they would see a team that ran the football downhill out of the I-formation.

Every minute of film study went by the wayside, however, when the Bulldogs came out and scored on their first possession using a brand-new spread offense with the shifty, 5-foot-7 Isaiah Coleman at quarterback, whom Rocky Mount High had not seen play the position.

Once the surprise factor wore off, however, Rocky Mount High’s superior athleticism on defense shone through. The Gryphons held Burlington Williams without a first down in the second half until the game’s final minute, and Rocky Mount High rushed for 325 yards in a 28-13 victory on Friday in the first round of the NCHSAA 3-A playoffs.

The Gryphons (10-2) will host No. 11 seed South Johnston, a 21-6 winner over Eastern Wayne, next Friday night in the second round.

“What we saw caught us off guard in the first half,” Gryphons coach Jason Battle said. “But I thought our biggest issue was just getting off the ball. It felt like we were sleepwalking.”

Despite an apparent lack of experience, however, Coleman looked natural at quarterback early in Friday’s game.

The sophomore dropped in a perfect pass over the top to Basil Tyler on a 3rd-and-16 play during the Bulldogs’ opening drive, and then snuck in from one yard out for a 7-0 lead.

“We weren’t sure what was going on for a little while because we thought they were going to run it right at us,” Rocky Mount High senior defensive back Aaron Parker said. “Once we started wrapping up and making tackles, we were fine.”

Parker, who saw his most extensive on-field action of the season Friday, intercepted two of Coleman’s passes, including one on a jump ball near the goal line as Burlington Williams went for it all on 4th-and-9 from the Gryphons’ 32 in the second quarter.

After a three-and-out on their first possession, the Gryphons’ offense kicked into gear to answer the Bulldogs’ early score. Jaclayton Freeman pulled in a 24-yard reception to get into Bulldogs territory, and Nick Bynum ran for 12 yards to set Rocky Mount High up at the 11.

A holding penalty wiped out what would have been a 6-yard touchdown run by Bynum and put the Gryphons in a tough spot, facing 3rd-and-14 from the 15.

Freeman got an easy release off the line of scrimmage against a backed-off defense, and Forrest Bell hit him in stride on a slant route for six.

Sherrod Greene came up with a big sack on a Burlington Williams third down one drive later, and a good punt pinned the Gryphons at their own eight.

Long, punishing drives have been a hallmark of the Rocky Mount High offense at its best this season, and they came up with another one. Tyrell Forbes ran for 11 and 10 yards to get the Gryphons out of the shadow of their own goalposts, before Nick Bynum gained 14 to the Bulldogs’ 38.

Three plays later, BJ Sanders took a sweep around the right side for a 15-yard score, capping an 11-play, 92-yard drive that took just 3:29 and giving Rocky Mount High a 14-7 lead that it would not let slip away.

“I think we just took what they were giving us, because they left the outside wide open,” Forbes said. “I got great blocking on the outside and their defensive line really wasn’t getting up the field like I thought they would.”

Bell essentially iced Friday’s game on the Gryphons’ first second-half drive with a 1-yard touchdown sneak, before Forbes added an 8-yard touchdown scamper in the fourth quarter.

“It feels good to win, but we’ve been here before now,” Forbes said. “We just feel like there’s more to do.”

Rocky Mount High 28
Burlington Williams 13
BW 7 0 0 6 – 13
RM 7 7 7 7 – 28
First Quarter
BW – Isaiah Coleman 1 run (Jacob Grimm kick), 6:29
RM – Jaclayton Freeman 15 pass from Forrest Bell (Chase Miller kick), 2:52
Second Quarter
RM – BJ Sanders 15 run (Miller kick), 7:37
Third Quarter
RM – Forrest Bell 1 run (Miller kick), 6:28
Fourth Quarter
RM – Tyrell Forbes 8 run (Miller kick), 10:52
BW – Torrence Williams 1 run (kick blocked), 0:43
BWRM
8 First downs……………20
25–56 Rushes-yards…..57–325
159 Passing yards………..64
7–11–2 Passes……………..4–7–0
215 Total offense…………389
0–0 Fumbles-Lost……….1–0
6–50 Penalties-Yards….7–60
Individual Statistics
Rushing – BW: Isaiah Coleman17–48; Basil Tyler 1–5; Torrence Williams 2–2; Nick Mintz 1–2; Adrian Harris 2–1; Colby Scott 1–(-2). RM: Tyrell Forbes 14–104; Nick Bynum 15–88; BJ Sanders 10–70; Deangelo Collins 10–41; Charlie Williams 3–18; Jalen Watson 1–7; Forrest Bell 4–(-3).
Passing – BW: Coleman 7–11–0, 159. RM: Bell 4–7–1, 64.
Receiving – BW: Carson Russell 2–70; Tyler 1–43; Bailey Sartin 1–29; Isaiah Grice 1–9; Reshaud Alston 2–8. RM: Jaclayton Freeman 2–39; Chris Richardson 1–13; Collins 1–12.

 

By Foster Lander
Sports Writer for Rocky Mount Telegram

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Gryphons earn victory while remembering slain peer

Rocky Mount High wide receiver Kevjorick Edwards, right, receives a pass as Northern Nash cornerback Namir Davis defends Friday during the game at Northern Nash High School. Photograph by Adam Jennings.

Rocky Mount High wide receiver Kevjorick Edwards, right, receives a pass as Northern Nash cornerback Namir Davis defends Friday during the game at Northern Nash High School. Photograph by Adam Jennings.

As Rocky Mount High players started to receive word of freshman football player Lavontae Brown’s death via Instagram early Friday afternoon, a night that should have been a coronation of sorts for the Big East champions soon took on a far more somber tone.

Gryphons coach Jason Battle and junior varsity head coach Jason Bracey both described Brown as a kid who always had a smile on his face, and who was committed to the Rocky Mount High program as much as any other.

It was understandable then that the Gryphons played most of Friday night’s game at Northern Nash in a daze. A second-half surge gave Rocky Mount High a 20-13 win over the rival Knights and the outright Big East crown and likely either a No. 3 or No. 4 seed in the 3-A or 3-AA playoffs when brackets are released this afternoon.

“I saw (Lavontae) almost every day and would always tell him just to keep his head screwed on straight,” Gryphons junior linebacker Sherrod Greene said. “I don’t want to say us coming out here and not playing well was because of what happened (Friday), but yeah, we had a lot on our minds other than football.”

Greene scored the Gryphons’ final touchdown on a 6-yard run in the fourth quarter after Northern Nash botched a punt snap deep in its own territory, giving Rocky Mount High the first semblance of breathing room it had enjoyed all night.

After the Gryphons had mostly rolled through the Big East, especially offensively, Northern Nash held them scoreless in the first half.

The Gryphons (9-2, 5-0) rushed for 91 yards and completed just 2 of 9 passing attempts in the first two quarters.

Forrest Bell missed two shots down the field early as the Gryphons tried to back the Knights off the line, but their inability to do so hampered running lanes.

“Our first priority is always stopping the run, and we’ve done that all year,” Knights coach Randy Raper said. “We don’t have a lot of size up front, but those boys will fight you all night.”

Rocky Mount High’s size advantage paid dividends after the break, however. Battle implored his offensive line and backs to take pride in what they were doing at halftime and to stop going through the motions.

BJ Sanders responded with a 57-yard touchdown run on the third play of the second half.

The two teams traded punts on the next two possessions, before Detrell Revis and Greene combined for a long punt return touchdown that was called back for a block-in-the-back penalty that had Gryphons coaches livid on the sidelines.

No matter, though.

Bell hit KK Edwards for a 46-yard gain on the first play of the drive, and Nick Bynum broke through off left tackle for a 19-yard touchdown run on 3rd-and-8 to give the Gryphons their first lead of the night at the 11:16 mark of the fourth quarter.

“I thought we did wake up a little bit after halftime, yeah,” Battle said. “But I hope this week was a wake-up call. We’re going to get people’s best shots from now on, and we can’t come out here just expecting to be handed wins.”

Northern Nash (3-8, 1-4) almost mounted a late comeback, as Christian Daniels cut the  margin to seven with 3:25 to go, finding Raymond Bullock for a 23-yard score on 4th-and-5.

Rocky Mount High went three-and-out and punted back to Northern Nash with 2:19 remaining, and the Knights started at their own 22 with no timeouts remaining.

Daniels broke through up the middle for 33 yards on first down, but the Gryphons’ pass-rushing duo of Greene and Artavious Richardson took over from there, forcing four straight incompletions.

“(Friday) was tough, man,” Greene said. “Lots of negative energy, and you could tell it affected us. But we did just enough.”

By FOSTER LANDER

Rocky Mount Telegram

 

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Gryphons fall to Cameron Union Pines in third round of tennis playoffs

Mary Blair Thompson, of Rocky Mount High, hits the ball Wednesday during a NCHSAA 3-A state playoffs third round match between Rocky Mount High and Cameron Union Pines at Rocky Mount High School. Photograph by Adam Jennings.

Mary Blair Thompson, of Rocky Mount High, hits the ball Wednesday during a NCHSAA 3-A state playoffs third round match between Rocky Mount High and Cameron Union Pines at Rocky Mount High School. Photograph by Adam Jennings.

Eliza Fike, of Rocky Mount High, hits the ball Wednesday during a NCHSAA 3-A state playoffs third round match between Rocky Mount High and Cameron Union Pines at Rocky Mount High School. Photograph by Adam Jennings.

Eliza Fike, of Rocky Mount High, hits the ball Wednesday during a NCHSAA 3-A state playoffs third round match between Rocky Mount High and Cameron Union Pines at Rocky Mount High School. Photograph by Adam Jennings.

 

 

To no fault of their own, Rocky Mount High had not seen the brand of girls’ tennis that drove an hour and a half to its campus Wednesday afternoon.

Cameron Union Pines, of the historically-tough-on-the-Gryphons-in-the-playoffs Cape Fear Valley Conference, wasn’t content with just hitting balls past Rocky Mount.

If still images could tell Wednesday’s story, they would show each of the six Gryphons singles players stretching to return balls across the net in a manner which wasn’t necessary their previous 14 matches.

Slice after slice forced Rocky Mount players to return balls that oftentimes were mid-calf high, and the Gryphons could not adjust to that style or a superior Cameron Union Pines lineup that came away with a 5-1 victory in the third round of the NCHSAA 3-A state playoffs.

“I haven’t seen a team that has been able to slice like that,” Gryphons coach Barry Nethercutt said. “You can slice it to keep it in play, but theirs was effective because it stayed low and had bite on it. It’s something most girls can’t do or won’t do, and it’s tough to play against.”

Rocky Mount (14-1) had breezed through its previous matches, winning the Big East Conference championship and sending a pair of doubles teams (Brenna Bryant/Chandler Brice and Eliza Fike/Mary Blair Thompson) to the state tournament last weekend in Burlington.

None of those experiences quite prepared the Gryphons against Union Pines, which has been one of the top-ranked 3-A programs all season long. Nethercutt’s squad lost to a Cape Fear Valley Conference team for the third consecutive postseason. Fayetteville Terry Sanford defeated Rocky Mount the previous two seasons.

Senior Chandler Brice pulled out the only Gryphons victory, 6-3, 7-5 at the No. 2 spot, but even her match did not come without considerable frustration because of mistakes or simply playing the caliber of opponent the Gryphons did not face in a weak Big East Conference this season.

In those matches, the Gryphons dictated the points, and returns did not often require scraping one’s racquet on the court.

There was little drama against Cameron Union Pines, whose No. 1 and No. 2 seeds won the 3-A state doubles tournament last weekend.

So even if the match – which technically ended with Gryphons No. 5 player Sarah Bland losing 6-4, 6-3 – had continued into a darkening sky, Rocky Mount would have faced an uphill task in doubles action against Union Pines (14-1).

“We didn’t really have top competition throughout the season,” Thompson said. “It was nice to hit with people like that who will get our returning players more prepared for next year. They had good shots and great angles.”

Brice, Fike and Thompson – the Gryphons’ No. 2, 3 and 4 players – will all graduate in the spring. Bryant returns at the top spot, and a crop of new players has Nethercutt confident that his Gryphons can possibly take another shot at a Cameron Union Pines team in 2016.

“It’s a group that’s going to have good chemistry, and I’m excited about it,” Nethercutt said. “I’m already looking forward to it right now.”

 

 

By Jessie H. Nunery

Sports Editor for Rocky Mount Telegram

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Mary McCall Leland qualifies for states

Mary McCall Leland

 

RED OAK – Mary McCall Leland had just one goal this season – return to the state meet.

Rocky Mount High’s Big East championship win was nice, but the Gryphons’ senior wanted to run one last time in Kernersville with the best runners from across the state. Ideally, the rest of the Gryphons’ squad would be joining her in uniform, but it did not work out that way for the senior.

The Gryphons finished sixth in Saturday’s 3-A East regional, missing out on a state championship spot by three points. But Leland earned her shot in Kernersville, placing 12th overall to claim the sixth of seven individual spots in the state meet.

“You could hear a course of sighs being released when we finished sixth,” Leland said. “It was cool to feel their positive energy for me even though they didn’t make it to states. … Multiple girls (told me before the race) ‘I hope you make it to states,’ which was inspiration for me to push myself harder and faster.”

As soon as the results announcement was over, Gryphons’ coach Dee Anna Davis gathered her team in quick huddle. She told them to be proud of their results and what they have accomplished this season.

“I didn’t want any of them to be disappointed in their performance,” Davis said. “I thought we ran pretty well, but it was so competitive with that group from three to six that just one or two people place differently (and we get in). … When you’re running against good teams, sometimes that’s
going to happen.”

Northern Nash’s girls know exactly what Rocky Mount High was feeling having missed out on the state meet last year with a fifth-place finish. That wasn’t an issue this year as the Knights finished eighth overall, 16 points behind Rocky Mount High.

 

By Josh Walfish

Sports Writer for Rocky Mount Telegram

 

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Gryphons beat Firebirds to win first league title since 2008

IMG_0085

 

Jason Battle has spent the first five years of his head coaching career trying to model Rocky Mount High’s program after what Brian Foster has built in 26 years in Bailey.

Now, Battle and the Gryphons finally have something to show for it.

Rocky Mount High withstood the Firebirds’ best shot in the first half and used two defensive touchdowns to race past Southern Nash, 35-14, on Friday night to earn the school’s first Big East championship since 2008.

The Gryphons (8-2 overall, 4-0 Big East) can wrap up a perfect conference season and an outright title next Friday with a win at Northern Nash.

“This is something we’ve been working toward for a long time,” Battle said. “The kids earned this one, not me, but to do it against Coach Foster, a man I have so much respect for, makes it special.”

Foster interrupted a celebratory postgame Rocky Mount High locker room to offer a thumbs-up and a word of encouragement. His Firebirds (7-3, 3-1) team had not been able to get out of its own way all night – a familiar, painful refrain – but Rocky Mount High did what championship teams do, and took full advantage.

“I really felt like we were in control going into halftime, but the interception changed the whole complexion of that game,” Foster said. “They made us pay for mistakes all night, so lots of credit to coach Battle’s team.”

Battle was in agreement: sophomore cornerback Charlie Williams’ interception of Zack Foster’s errant pass inside Gryphons territory with 1:13 to play before halftime turned Friday’s game on its head.

The Firebirds were driving and tried to set up a screen on 3rd-and-8, but Zack Foster threw to the other side of the field, with no teammates in the vicinity.

Forrest Bell then hit Deangelo Collins for 14 yards on first down, and with the clock under a minute, Nick Bynum caught a delayed screen pass and rumbled 42 yards down the left sideline, getting the Gryphons inside the 10.

Bynum ran for no gain on first down but powered in from six yards out for the game-tying touchdown with 14 seconds remaining in the half.

“I was hoping they wouldn’t run me down on the screen pass, but it didn’t matter,” Bynum said. “Somebody needed to make a play so we could go into halftime feeling better about ourselves.”

Sherrod Greene ensured the Gryphons’ pre-halftime momentum carried over.

Southern Nash received the opening kickoff of the second half and drove all the way to the Rocky Mount High red zone, complements of two long runs from Kendrick Bell and Jaquay Mitchell. But, on 2nd-and-7 from the Gryphons’ 20, Zack Foster took a keeper off right tackle, fumbled, and picked the ball up on the bounce. Foster never fully regained control, and defensive back Deshaquon Fate’s hard hit jarred the ball loose.

Greene, for the second week in a row, scooped up the loose ball and galloped 68 yards for a go-ahead score.

“Just in the right place at the right time, but (Deshaquon) did most of the work for me,” Greene said. “I think that play sort of took the wind out of them.”

Southern Nash could have folded much earlier – after their first offensive play from scrimmage, really – but the Firebirds kept coming.

After Rocky Mount High turned it over on downs at the Southern Nash 22 on the game’s opening possession, the Firebirds took over; after a false start, Foster handed to Dae’one Wilkins. The exchange was shaky, and Rocky Mount High jarred it loose. Rod White picked up the fumble and found the end zone from 16 yards out.

One possession later, the Mitchell fumbled the ball away, but Southern Nash’s defense stood tall and got it back by forcing BJ Sanders to cough up the ball.

Bell scored from 13 yards out, two plays after a 66-yard run from Mitchell, and the Firebirds had answered the early challenge.

Southern Nash led, briefly, after Bell’s second touchdown of the first half, and despite multiple errors, the Firebirds looked set to take a lead to the locker room, but Williams’ interception got the Gryphons going.

“Our kids are playing with so much confidence right now, and they needed something like that to happen,” Battle said. “They took it and ran with it.”

Greene said Rocky Mount High’s work is just beginning.

“It feels great to be champions of something, but this is just one step,” he said.

By Foster Lander
Sports Writer/Rocky Mount Telegram

Saturday, October 31, 2015

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