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Handley, James Wood to scrap for playoff spot

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VaPreps Honorable Mention
Sep 2, 2003
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Handley, James Wood to scrap for playoff spot


James Wood’s Jaden Ashby will be looking to get loose against the Handley defense on Saturday as the Colonels and Judges look to clinch a regional playoff spot with a victory. Ashby leads the Colonels with 42 catches for 652 yards and 9 touchdowns.

  • Jeff Taylor/The Winchester Star



Handley running back Noah Hendrickson will be looking for yardage in Saturday's key Class 4 Northwestern District clash against James Wood. Hendrickson has rushed for 264 yards and three scores this season.

  • Jeff Taylor/The Winchester Star

The formula is pretty simple for the James Wood and Handley football teams as they clash Saturday afternoon at James R. Wilkins Jr. Stadium: Win and you’re in the Region 4C playoffs.

“Our record means nothing now,” Handley coach Dan Jones said. “We’re both 0-0 and whoever wins moves on.”

The Judges (7-2, 4-2) and Colonels (6-3, 3-3) know that their seasons are on the line. Liberty and Sherando have already clinched two of the Class 4 Northwestern District’s four playoff spots. Millbrook needs a win tonight against Culpeper County, winless in district play, to grab the third spot.


That likely leaves only one spot left as the longtime rivals battle to end playoff droughts. The Judges have not made the postseason since 2013 and the Colonels’ last trip was in 2014.

Everyone knows what is on the line.

“Walking through school today, everybody is saying something about it,” James Wood coach Ryan Morgan said. “Obviously the athletes and the kids know, the lunch ladies and other teachers know and everything. People are paying attention.”

“We’ve talked about winning this game for a lot of reasons, but they know it’s a playoff atmosphere,” Jones said of his players. “It’s going to be a big crowd and James Wood is going to be ready to play. We are going to have to play our best.”

The two schools have played plenty of big games in their 57 previous meetings. Morgan says the Colonels always are up for beating a local rival, but doubts his players know much about that history.

“I don’t think James Wood vs. Handley is a big of a rivalry to some of them as it used to be when James Wood and Handley used to be the only schools in town,” Morgan said. “This sort of forces it to be amplified a little bit more. Obviously, there are a lot of people in the community who only care about James Wood vs. Handley. These kids don’t have a choice because Sherando and Millbrook are in the rear window [this season].”

Both teams have had their winning moments this season, but a couple of interesting trends have emerged in their losses.

In falling to Sherando and Liberty (40-27 last week), Handley committed nine turnovers, seven of those coming on interceptions.

Jones said those numbers are a byproduct of having a first-year quarterback who is learning on the fly. Former running back Malachi Imoh has been devastating carrying the ball (1,675 yards, 24 touchdowns), but has thrown an area-high 14 interceptions.

“We’ve got to be able to throw the ball and so you’ve got to be able to practice it in a game situation,” Jones explained. “We’re getting Malachi in situations that he can make a play when we need it. Unfortunately he’s made a couple of bad reads and bad throws here and there, but it hasn’t really haunted us in some games. The Sherando and Liberty games it came back to bite us.

“You have to practice it. You can’t ask a kid to throw the ball three times a game all of a sudden when we need him to throw the ball to ask him also to turn it on. I’ve put him into situations that may not have been the best in some games. We are getting better in our passing game which makes us more balanced, but we have to do a better job of holding onto the ball when we are running it. You are going to throw interceptions when you throw the ball. It’s part of life.”

James Wood has had trouble stopping their opponents in its losses. The Colonels have given up at least 40 points and more than 530 yards of total offense in each of their losses.

Now they face the district’s most dynamic player in Imoh, who has broken off long touchdown runs against everyone. Imoh had a 92-yarder during the Colonels’ 21-14 overtime win over the Judges last season.

“You hope that you can stop him,” Morgan said of Imoh. “You hope you have some magical pill and take and swallow him up as a defense, but that doesn’t exist and hasn’t existed for anyone this year. … As far as completely shutting him down, I would love it if that happens, but it’s unlikely. The big key is to limit his opportunities and limit his big plays.”

Without mentioning anyone by name, Jones indicated the Judges will do whatever it takes to move the ball. “This is no longer preparing for the future,” he said. “This is a playoff game. Whatever we can do successfully is what we are going to do.”


The Judges also face a challenge on defense. The Colonels lead the area in total yardage (385.4 per game). Also they are the most balanced team. Led by Sam Adkins (1,046 yards, 15 TDs), the Colonels have gained 1,671 yards on the ground. Led by quarterback Carson Hoberg (1,777 yards, 15 TDs) and receiver Jaden Ashby (42 catches, 9 TDs), James Wood has gained 1,798 yards through the air.

“They execute very well,” Jones said. “They don’t rely on just one person, They get many people the ball. Their running backs run hard. Their receivers run good routes and run hard after they catch the ball.”

The Judges will look to pressure Hoberg, but are wary of his scrambling ability. Hoberg had 41 yards rushing and a TD run against Millbrook last week.

“He’s a kid that if don’t put pressure on that can sit back there and hurt you,” Jones said.

The Colonels offense also will get a lift with the return of speedster William Crowder, who missed last week’s 40-37 loss against Millbrook.

What will it take to win Saturday? The answers for both teams are what anyone would expect.

“We have to slow Malachi Imoh down,” Morgan said. “That’s the number one goal when we are on defense. When we are on offense, we have to make sure we’re finding the right guys to block up front. They will line up six guys at the line of scrimmage. Sometimes they’ll send six and sometimes they’ll send four. We have to figure out who those guys are and block them appropriately.”

“We can’t turn the ball over,” Jones said. “We are minus-11 in those three games with Millbrook, Sherando and Liberty and we are 1-2. We’ve got to figure out a way to hang onto the ball and allow our defense to do what it has been doing — play great and keep us in the ballgame. When we figure it out, get a drive.”

Morgan said one more element could affect the outcome, which is so important to both teams.

“We also have to make adjustments because they are going to try to take away some things and we’re going to try to take away some things,” he said. “Both coaching staffs are going to have to figure out how to adjust during the game.”
 
44 to 21 final.

Handley will host next Saturday at 1pm.

Sherando and Millbrook travels.
 
75380532_414735279474484_7188403131712012288_n.jpg
 
Handley's Malachi Imoh broke school single-season records for rushing yards and rushing TDs today.

He has 1,952 rush yards (Trae Peck had 1,688 in 2010) and 29 rush TDs (Adam Woods had 28 in 1999).
 
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Imoh's record-setting day leads Handley past James Wood and into playoffs

Handley's Malachi Imoh crosses the goal line after splitting through the James Wood defense for a five-yard TD run in the second quarter on Saturday at the Judges' James R. Wilkins Jr. Stadium. Imoh had 277 yards and five touchdowns and also threw for 77 yards and a touchdown as Handley won 44-21 and clinched a Region 4C playoff berth. James Wood's Jackson Turner (2) and Austin Schmitt (52) were among those in pursuit on the play.

  • ROBERT NIEDZWIECKI/The Winchester Star



James Wood's William Crowder hauls in a 30-yard pass from Carson Hoberg as the Judges' Dayvon Newman (left) and Miles Ashe defend in the second quarter of Saturday's game at Handley. Ashe pushed Crowder out at the 2-yard line but Hoberg scored two plays later.

  • ROBERT NIEDZWIECKI/The Winchester Star



Handley's Stephen Daley (6) moves in as James Wood's Sam Adkins (40) carries the ball in the first half of Saturday's game at the Judges' James R. Wilkins Jr. Stadium. Daley had 2.5 sacks in Handley's 44-21 win.

  • ROBERT NIEDZWIECKI/The Winchester Star

WINCHESTER — What a way to break a playoff drought.

In what amounted to a play-in game for the Region 4C playoffs, Handley dominated James Wood 44-21 on Saturday at James R. Wilkins Jr. Stadium to earn its first trip to the postseason since 2013.

Judges senior quarterback Malachi Imoh torched James Wood for 277 yards and five touchdowns rushing and 77 yards and one TD passing as Handley (8-2, 5-2 Class 4 Northwestern District) built up a 21-0 lead in the second quarter and a 44-7 advantage five seconds into the fourth quarter. James Wood's last two touchdowns came against Handley's reserves in the final four minutes.

A victory by the Colonels (6-4) would have sent James Wood to the playoffs for the first time since 2014, but the Judges rarely wavered in a game in which they outgained the Colonels 459-280. Handley kept that James Wood yardage down with five sacks (2.5 by Stephen Daley).

The Judges were all smiles after the game, and the players let out several cheers while they gathered for their post-game huddle on the field. Handley will be the No. 2 seed for the Northwestern District in the Region 4C quarterfinals and will host Loudoun Valley (the No. 3 Dulles team) next Saturday at 1 p.m.

"It's nothing but excitement," said Handley senior linebacker Quinton Newman. "I don't even know what to do with myself right now, I'm so excited."

"It's such a big game for us," said Imoh, who broke Handley's school single-season rushing yardage and rushing touchdown marks on Saturday. "The James Wood game itself is just big after we lost year [in overtime] in a really emotional game, and we knew if we won we were going to the playoffs.

"We were able to execute and convert. We started really fast, and we were able to keep that going through the game."

Imoh has been stellar all year, but on Saturday he was at his best.

He had a 13-yard TD run to close out a 91-yard drive on Handley's first possession.

He had a five-yard TD run in which he split two defenders on the left edge with 3:51 left in the second quarter.

After Tycuan McMillan recovered a fumbled James Wood kickoff at the Colonel 40-yard line, Imoh found an opening down the right sideline to make it 21-0.

Just when it seemed James Wood might settle into the game after Carson Hoberg (12 of 18 for 215 yards and one TD, two rush TDs) capped off a 10-play, 72-yard drive with a two-yard TD run with just 15.9 seconds left in the half, Imoh struck again on the first play after the kickoff went out of bounds.

Imoh ran around the left side, then reversed course as he neared the 20-yard line, cutting almost all the way back across the field for a 57-yard TD run with just two seconds left on the clock. Adam Pollak (5 of 5 on extra points, 39-yard field goal) kicked the extra point to send the game into halftime at 28-7.

"We ran a sweep, we blocked really well up front and I was able to cut it back," Imoh said. "There were two guys on the left side, so I think I split them and saw a lot of area on the right side. I was able to cut back across and get into the end zone from there. That gave us a lot of momentum going into halftime."

Imoh added another 57-yard TD run in the third quarter when it looked for a moment that the Colonels might corral him in the backfield, but he was able to circle back and around the defense on the right side and burst into the clear, putting the Judges up 41-7 with 4:40 left in the third quarter.

Handley made no secret of its desire to establish the running game. Imoh ran seven times for 80 yards and Noah Hendrickson (12 carries for 59 yards) toted the ball twice for eight yards on a 10-play, 91-yard drive to start the game. Imoh only attempted three passes in the first half and five total (he had a 39-yard TD throw to Jayden Vardaro in the second half) as the Judges gained 380 yards on the ground.

Imoh gave a lot of credit to the offensive line for giving him the time to find openings. That group features left tackle Solomon Johnson, left guard Noah Johnson, center Luke Foltz, right guard Joey Ashby and right tackle Kobe Wolfinbarger. Wolfinbarger had to leave with an injury early in the second half, but Tommy Ashby stepped in and kept the Judges humming.

"They were able to just come out from the beginning of the game and make really great, big holes both for me and Noah," Imoh said. "We were able to find the holes the offensive line made and hit them full speed."

And when Imoh wasn't hitting them at full speed, he did a good job of waiting for his running lanes to develop.

"The thing he's really improved on this year is the patience and the vision," Jones said. "And of course it's nice to have that speed."

It was a combination that proved too much for James Wood to handle, but the Colonels are hardly alone. Imoh's record totals this year are now 1,952 rush yards (Trae Peck had 1,688 in 2010) and 29 rushing TDs (Adam Woods had 28 in 1999).

"Liberty has a really good defense and really good athletes, and they did a really good job of hemming him in [last week]," James Wood coach Ryan Morgan said. "We were hoping we could keep him hemmed in and keep him bottled up a little bit, but obviously we didn't make the plays that were there to make.

"He's a dynamic athlete, probably the best offensive player in the area. He deserves all the accolades. It's tough. He's almost impossible to stop. We expected him to make some plays, but obviously he put his team on his back early and helped them jump out to a big lead."

Handley's defense showed right away that it wasn't going to make it easy for James Wood to rip off big gains of its own.

The Judges had two sacks in forcing the Colonels to go three-and-out on their first possession. The mobile Hoberg did his best to keep plays alive, but he finished with minus-4 yards on 13 carries because of the sacks and was just 9 of 14 for 95 yards until the final four minutes of the game.

"They do a good job of bringing people, and obviously Stephen Daley's tough to handle off the edge," Morgan said. "I think some of our route combinations were coming open, but when you only have [a few] seconds, it's tough."

The Colonels had some opportunities early, but couldn't convert. They recovered a fumbled punt at the Handley 40 after their first possession, but Hoberg's swing pass to the left flat on fourth-and-1 from the 9 was too far in front of his intended target and fell incomplete. James Wood's second possession ended with Sam Adkins (18 rush, 65 yards) getting stuffed for no gain on fourth-and-1 from the Judges' 40.

James Wood came into the weekend averaging 34.6 points and an area-best 385.4 yards per game.

"Our first-team defense gave up seven points, and that's a great job," Jones said. "That's a balanced offense that James Wood runs, and they do it well.

"We couldn't let [Hoberg] sit back there. We had to stay in our lanes and rush. We didn't always do that well, because he scrambled and got out and made some plays to hurt us. But overall, we knew we had to get in his face and force him to make quicker decisions."

Jones said he couldn't be happier for his team and particularly for his seniors for what they accomplished. Not only did the Judges break a six-year playoff drought, but they've also won eight games for the first time since 2010.

"The seniors have brought this program back to where this program needs to be and should be," Jones said. "It's because of their hard work and dedication and holding each other accountable that has really made this difference for us."

While Handley celebrated on one end of the field, the faces of James Wood's players were red with sadness over seeing their season end. Members of James Wood's 21-member senior class hugged each other prior to leaving the field.

While the Colonels might not have played their best game, senior Will Crowder (three catches. 75 yards) was proud of how the team fought Saturday, and throughout the season.

"We never threw in the towel and said, 'We're just done, and we don't care,'" Crowder said. "We kept on fighting and did everything we were taught.

"I'm just proud of this team. It's been a heck of a season. I wasn't able to play last week [because of injury] but I made sure I was going to play today. I want to thank our whole offensive line, my quarterback Carson, Sam [Adkins], and especially Coach Morgan and all the coaches that have helped me."

James Wood had its first winning season since 2010 this year, and Crowder hopes the underclassmen will build off it next year.

"We're really proud of the seniors," Morgan said. "We have a big senior class, and they put in a lot of effort. They're great kids. The leadership came from across the board. It wasn't just one or two people. There are some years where we don't have many leaders at all. It really helps when you have good athletes who are also good people in the classroom and hard workers.

"We're proud of the direction that the program is going. We went from four wins last year to six wins and just short of making the playoffs. We're proud of the direction, we just wished we could have turned it up a notch a little bit sooner."

James Wood was also led by sophomore Jaden Ashby, who caught six passes for 125 yards, including a 76-yard TD from Hoberg with 3:36 left.
 
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