September 13 in Bryant athletic history: 2014

Hornets overwhelm Lions in the first half

EDITOR’S NOTE: Because the look back at each day in Bryant athletic history has been so favorably received during the time when there was no sports during the COVID-19 shutdown, BryantDaily.com will continueposting past stories of Bryant athletics either posted on BryantDaily.com (from 2009 to the present) or published in the Bryant Times (from 1998 to 2008).

Photos by Kevin Nagle and Rick Nation

Nick Hardin (24) and Steven Murdock (27) prevent a touchdown catch by McClellan's Kenneth Buffington. (Photo by Rick Nation)

Nick Hardin (24) and Steven Murdock (27) prevent a touchdown catch by McClellan’s Kenneth Buffington. (Photo by Rick Nation)

There’s a lot to be said for taking care of business.

For instance, when your football team is playing an opponent it figures to beat handily and they do.

It’s not always a given.

Certainly, the Bryant Hornets thought that was the situation when they opened the season against the Benton Panthers a week ago and that they didn’t take care of business. The teams tied, 14-14.

This week, the Hornets made quick work of the Little Rock McClellan Crimson Lions piling up a 42-0 halftime lead and finishing with a 49-21 victory in which just about everyone that suited up got to play.

Now McClellan, a struggling Class 5A program, is not Benton — the Class 6A Panthers were better than the Hornets probably thought they’d be and a quick look at their schedule indicates they may be 7-0-1 going into a week eight showdown at Lake Hamilton. But, nonetheless, the Hornets were efficient and effective in dismissing the Lions, scoring on their first six possessions and holding McClellan to two first downs and 56 yards of offense in that first half.

Paul Tierney (35) follows teammate Devin Waite (78). (Photo by Kevin Nagle)

Paul Tierney (35) follows teammate Devin Waite (78). (Photo by Kevin Nagle)

Once a conference rival that actually held a series edge over the Hornets, McClellan was not scheduled for week 2 initially. Bryant was supposed to get a return date with Little Rock Central. But when BHS head coach Paul Calley was making out the schedule, everything was in flux because of the school district’s lawsuit against the Arkansas Activities Association had yet to be resolved. Had Bryant won the case, the Hornets would be back in the South Conference again this year, presumably playing the same schedule as in 2013 with Conway, Central and Catholic their non-conference foes.

The suit was filed to keep Bryant from having to be in a 7A/6A-Central Conference that not only included Conway and Catholic but Russellville, Van Buren, Alma, Greenwood and Siloam Springs.

As it turned out, the ruling went against Bryant so Conway and Catholic became conference games to be schedule in week 4 or later, the Salt Bowl returned to being the season opener since it was no longer a conference game. Calley was left scrambling for a week 2 opponent because, while the jury was out so to speak, Central had contracted with Fort Smith Northside to play in week 2, moving the Bryant-Central contest to week 3.

Hayden Knowles (34) makes a tackle for a loss. (Photo by Rick Nation)

Hayden Knowles (34) makes a tackle for a loss. (Photo by Rick Nation)

McClellan was the only team Calley could find that was looking for a week 2 foe other than some teams in northwest Arkansas. With trips to Siloam and Van Buren on the slate already, the cost of a third long trip made that problematic.

Enter the Lions, trying to build back to the program it was in the 1990’s and early 2000’s under second-year head coach Maurice Moody.

That process continues. The Hornets had them overmatched. Of course, a lopsided win is always great, giving reserves a chance to log some varsity playing time.

In the first half, junior quarterback Gunnar Burks scored twice and tossed a TD pass to senior Quinton Royal, senior running back Kylon Boyle ran for two scores and senior quarterback Brandan Warner picked up 6 points. In the second half, Seth Tucker dashed 30 yards for a seventh TD.

The Hornets amassed 467 yards of offense including 307 on the ground with 10 different backs carrying the ball. Five different quarterbacks completed passes. As a group, they were 13 of 16 for 160 yards.

Brandan Warner (12) tries to fight through a tackle. (Photo by Kevin Nagle)

Brandan Warner (12) tries to fight through a tackle. (Photo by Kevin Nagle)

Defensively, so many players got in on tackles that the leading tackler, defensive end Hunter Fugitt led with six including two for losses. All three of Cameron Murray’s stops were for losses. Sophomore Hayden Knowles was in on three tackles and recovered two fumbles. Jordan McDonald and Tanner Austin also recovered fumbles for the Hornets.

McClellan finished with 143 yards of total offense.

On the opening drive, the Hornets cruised 61 yards in six plays, highlighted by Paul Tierney’s 18-yard run on the speed sweep and Warner’s 22 yard pass to Royal. Burks carried in from the 3 for the touchdown.

The Lions went three-and-out and punted Bryant to midfield. Five plays later, Burks scored from the 3 again. Kylon Boyle’s 16-yard gallop got the drive started. Tierney added another 27 yards on the speed sweep again.

Jaylon Peterson and Kenneth Buffington had runs of 19 and 11 yards, respectively, as the Lions picked up their first two first downs on the subsequent drive. They got to midfield only to fumble. Knowles recovered.

The Hornets worked on the passing game, which produced just 40 yards against Benton, and Warner completed three consecutive passes to Tierney, Evan Lee and DeAmonte Terry. As a running back, Terry crashed 17 yards to set up Boyle’s 1-yard plunge into the end zone.

Alex Denker added his third extra point to make it 21-0 with 2:52 still to play in the first quarter.

Sophomore Austin Kelly (5) makes a catch and cuts back past McClellan's Miguel Evans (40). (Photo by Rick Nation)

Sophomore Austin Kelly (5) makes a catch and cuts back past McClellan’s Miguel Evans (40). (Photo by Rick Nation)

And when McClellan didn’t use enough time on their next series, resulting in another punt, it left Bryant enough time for another TD march. They covered 67 yards in four plays, overcoming a holding penalty along the way. Warner and Lee hooked up for 20 yards to open the series. From the 49, Warner kept on the read option and dashed to his touchdown.

Denker made it 28-0.

Knowles recovered another fumble on the first play of the second quarter and the Hornets’ offense was in business again. After a pair of procedure penalties, Burks broke a 24-yard run to the 1. Boyle got the 6 from there.

This time, Hayden Ray added the PAT and it was 35-0 with 11:03 still to play in the half.

Another Lions punt gave the Hornets their next possession at their own 38. Again, five plays covered the ground. Burks threw a 14-yard pass to Austin Kelly then Sevonte Turner sliced 25 yards to the 17. A play later, Burks threw to Royal for the 9-yard touchdown and it was 42-0 with 6:59 left in the half.

Mario Waits (92), Devon Alpe (25), Ben Bruick (15) and Hunter Fugitt (33) pile up a McClellan ballcarrier. (Photo by Rick Nation)

Mario Waits (92), Devon Alpe (25), Ben Bruick (15) and Hunter Fugitt (33) pile up a McClellan ballcarrier. (Photo by Rick Nation)

When the half ended, Madison Schrader had moved the Hornets within 12 yards of another touchdown, a drive he highlighted with an 18-yard run and a 23-yard pass to Kelly.

The second half started with McClellan’s Ezekiel Baldwin returing the kickoff 87 yards for a touchdown. On the extra-point attempt, a bad snap forced Pierre Strong, the holder, to make a run for it and he got to the corner in time to make it 42-8.

Moments later, fumble on the handoff of Bryant’s first play of the half was picked up by Travoris Akins who scooped and scored from 30 yards out. Jesus Martinez kicked the extra point and before the Lions had run a single play on offense, they’d put 15 points on the board.

DeAmonte Terry hauls in a pass. (Photo by Kevin Nagle)

DeAmonte Terry hauls in a pass. (Photo by Kevin Nagle)

Of course, the half started with the sportsmanship or mercy rule in effect. Except for timeouts, the clock ran continuously.

The Hornets were forced to punt for the only time but, three plays into the Lions’ possession, quarterback Dalvion Childs fumbled. McDonald recovered. Behind Terry’s running and a 10-yard pass completion from sophomore Beaux Bonvillain to Landon Smith, the Hornets drove to the Lions’ 34. Bonvillain then hit senior Michael Martindale with a flat pass that the receiver turned into a 31-yard gain. Tucker’s scoring dash followed on the next play as he traipsed the right sideline.

Ray booted it to 49-15.

McClellan added a 53-yard touchdown pass in the final five minutes. Childs connected with Buffington on the play. It was the lone pass completion of the night for the Lions.

A try for two resulted in the fumble that Austin covered. A tussle in the end zone resulted in a McClellan player being penalized 15 yards on the kickoff and being ejected from the game.

The kickoff rolled to the 3, however. With 3:43 or so left, Jarret Jacobs took over at quarterback and completed a 13-yard pass to Najee Hunt to get Bryant out of the hole but the McClellan players wrestled the ball away from Hunt at the end of the play.

The Lions took a timeout to try to get another score on the boards but three passes from the 20 fell incomplete. Martinez came in on the last play of the game to try a 36-yard field goal but it was wide of the mark.

HORNETS 49, CRIMSON LIONS 21

Score by quarters

LR McClellan  0          0          15       6 — 21

BRYANT          28       14       0          7 — 49

Scoring summary

First quarter

BRYANT — Burks 3 run (Denker kick), 9:53

BRYANT — Burks 3 run (Denker kick), 5:55

BRYANT — Boyle 1 run (Denker kick), 2:52

BRYANT — Warner 49 run (Denker kick), 0:10.3

Second quarter

BRYANT — Boyle 1 run (Ray kick), 11:03

BRYANT — Royal 9 pass from Burks (Denker kick), 6:59

Third quarter

LR McCLELLAN — Baldwin 87 kickoff return (Strong run), 10:29

LR McCLELLAN — Akins 30 fumble return (Martinez kick), 8:36

Fourth quarter

BRYANT — Tucker 30 run (Ray kick), 11:11

LR McCLELLAN — Buffington 53 pass from Childs (run failed), 4:45

Team stats

                        McClellan      Bryant

First downs    4                      21

Rushes-yds    24-90             30-307

Passing           1-5-0              13-16-0

Passing yds    53                   160

Punts-avg.      4-34.5             1-34.0

Fumbles-lost  6-4                  2-2

Penalties-yds 4-48                6-40

INDIVIDUAL STATS:

Rushing: BRYANT, Warner 2-56, Tierney 2-45, Terry 6-44, Burks 6-43, Boyle 6-37, Schrader 3-30, Tucker 1-30, Turner 1-25, Coleman 2-2, Bonvillain 1-(-5); LR McCLELLAN, Buffington 3-22, Baldwin 8-19, Peterson 2-18, Childs 2-17, Scott 4-12, Young 3-3, Nellums 1-1, Smith 1-(-2).

Passing (C-A-I-Y): BRYANT, Warner 5-7-0-77; Bonvillain 3-4-0-34, Burks 3-3-0-26, Schrader 1-1-0-23, Jacobs 1-1-0-13; LR McCLELLAN, Childs 1-5-0-53.

Receiving: BRYANT, Royal 3-34, Kelly 2-37, Lee 2-32, Terry 2-10, Martindale 1-31, Hunt 1-13, L.Smith 1-10, Tierney 1-6; LR McCLELLAN, Buffington 1-53.

3 comments

  1. I completely disagree with this statement, “the Class 6A Panthers were better than the Hornets”. They are not “better”, granted the Hornets didn’t play at their best during the Bowl Game, but I think that was due to several reasons; one, we went into this game a little over confident, two our passing game was practically non-existent, three some of the plays getting called by our side were down right stupid. If we had played Benton with the same heart and determination we played the Lions we would have won. I’m not knocking the Panthers excellent game at the Salt Bowl and yes they proved that they have a good team this year, but better than the Hornets? I think not.

    While I’m complaining let me just put this out there…why in all that is holy does the Hornet Coach keep making the same play over and over and expect a different outcome ? That is the definition of insanity! I’m not going to name names, but you keep running the ball straight up the center time after time using the same running back, KNOWING that he not only can’t get through but the opposing team KNOWS we are going to do this, when instead you should give the ball to one of the running backs that has the bulk and strength to push through the center? Granted the player I’m talking about is an AWESOME running back, he has the agility to run on the outside and dodge any obstacle the opposing team whats to throw at him…that along with his speed is his calling card as a running back. It just seems like a lot of other running backs with their own brand of talent are getting ignored at the expense of our teams betterment. Yes, one of my sons is a running back but I’m not just referencing him when I say this.

  2. Okay, one more thing…I was at the Lions game and once the 3rd quarter started with the score at 42-0 the coach made a sound decision allowing the 1st string to sit out and give some of the other players a chance to run the ball. But I have got to say I was seriously disappointed in some of our fans! After a particularly brutal play where we not only lost the ball, but the Lions made their first touchdown, one of our fans screamed out, “GREAT, Can we put the REAL players back in now!?!?!”. Talk about disrespectful! My boys are lucky to be first string, but I have NO problem with allowing other players the opportunity play in a real game, especially when we have such a good lead. Anybody that knows anything about team sports, knows that practice play and game play are vastly different and everybody desires the chance to play in a real game, regardless of what string you’re in! They practice just as hard as the first string! So SHAME ON YOU…to whoever that insensitive fan was.

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