SPORTS
Football Roundup
Nocona
The Nocona Indians lost their first game of the season on Friday night in Trenton.
The Tigers won a close game 23-21 against the Indians in a game that was not Nocona’s best.
The Indians came into the game confident with a 6-0 record with room for improvement. Trenton came into the game with a 3-3 record and a one-sided loss to Alvord to start district play off the previous week.
The Tigers scored first on a five-yard run. Nocona answered back quick as Johnny Stone scored on a 37-yard run to tie the score at 7-7.
The rest of the half saw both offenses struggle after defensive adjustments. The Indians lost quick-footed safety and running back Michael Wetmore in the first quarter coming off his best game and the lightning to Stone’s thunder in the rushing attack.
Arturo Garcia stepped up and in the final minute before halftime got loose for a 32-yard touchdown run. Nocona was up 14-7 heading into halftime.
Midway through the third quarter, the Tigers had a good sequence of forcing a safety on defense and then quickly scoring once they had the ball to take a 15-14 lead.
The two teams defenses kept the score close for the rest of quarter and into the fourth. Driving with about three minutes left to play in the game, Nocona turned the ball over on an interception that was returned for a touchdown. Trenton then converted the two-point conversion to go up two scores with the lead 23-14.
The Indians responded by scoring fast as quarterback Brady McCasland found Garcia for a 20-yard touchdown pass to cut the lead down to 23-21 with 1:12 left to play.
Saint Jo
The Saint Jo Panthers start district this Friday against proverbial district favorite and state-power Union Hill.
The two programs have faced off the past two years despite three-hour commute to challenge the other, with the Bulldogs winning in 2020 and Saint Jo winning last year in 2021.
That was going to be the end of the series as both coaches agreed the three hour drive was just too far until realignment put them in each other’s district now.
Union Hill returns most of its key contributors from last year’s team which the Panthers embarrassed 60-22, though that game was much closer for three quarters then the final scored would indicate. The Bulldogs are 7-0, but have only been challenged once so far against a Fort Worth THESA home school team it beat 48-44.
The Panthers have bounced back this year and are 6-1 in their pre-district schedule. The team was humbled three weeks back in their loss to Knox City, knowing it cannot rely on its some superior talent when playing top teams and knowing it will take a full team effort.
Not too much is going to be surprising for the Saint Jo staff heading into the game. Coach Mark Stevens knows defensively they will have to stop a bruising running attack, but stay disciplined for when the Bulldogs do throw they will be looking for the big play.
Gold-Burg vs Forestburg
Gold-Burg will host Forestburg this Friday as both teams come off a bye-week and knowing it will be an important step going forward into the final two weeks of the season.
Both teams come into the game with a 2-5 record as neither team’s pre-district schedule had many easy games. Both can say they have played the toughest teams they will face this season already.
Gold-Burg’s two wins came against Chillicothe and former district opponent Fannindel in weeks three and four, but since then have lost tough games against highly thought of opponents Saint Jo, Motley County and Union Hill.
The Longhorns wins came against the North Texas Spartans to open the season and against Cornerstone Christian Academy in week five. The team is coming off its probably toughest opponent Knox City before heading into the break.
Gold-Burg has had the recent series advantage, winning the last three games. The Bears have struggled more this season after some key players graduated, with most of the blame Coach Brady Hibbitts says comes from the lack of execution.
Gold-Burg will come in confident from its recent domination of the series as only seniors were around for the last time Forestburg won in 2019.
The Longhorns don’t have any of those on their roster, but the program has been trending up after several seasons low numbers and middling results.
Coach Greg Roller is not only has a double-digit roster depth for the first time, but enough commitment from his players that he reported few issues dealing with last week’s fall break that would cause many players to skip practice in the past.
Roller says there will be few surprises from the other team as both are familiar with the other’s talent. He suspects whichever team can control the ball the longest will have the advantage in ultimately winning the game.
The game is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 21 at Gold-Burg.
To read the full story, pick up a copy of the mid-week edition of the Bowie News.
SPORTS
Nocona boys beat Saint Jo 55-48
The Nocona Indians were able to beat Saint Jo at home on Thursday night in a tight contest.
The Indians won 55-48 against the Panthers in a game where both teams played hard, but made plenty of early season mistakes.
Nocona came into the game following a low-scoring win against Bells earlier in the week 35-30. For a young Indians team that only has a few players with varsity experience this year, every early season win builds confidence.
For Saint Jo, the Panthers were still without several returning starters since football is still going on. Despite that, new Coach Jacob Nocktonick is trying to build what he can with his group of basketball first players that include several key players even when the football team is integrated.
Despite Saint Jo being the smaller school, overall it had the height advantage in the front line since Nocona features only one player, Kasch Johnson, who is built like a post player. That is nothing new for the Indians, who featured a short team the previous year as Coach Brody Wilson emphasizes full-court pressure on defense and pushing the ball in transition in his system that makes up for a lack of height and size.
Initially Nocona’s pace and energy, grabbing several offensive rebounds, got it the lead 9-3. Eventually, the Panthers adjusted and trailed only 12-11 after the first quarter.
Saint Jo got the lead early in the second quarter. Post Trent Gaston took advantage of his size advantage, especially when the Indians had Johnson out, and led 17-12. Both teams had trouble scoring in a rough second quarter as open perimeter shots just were not going in and shots at the rim were tough to convert.
The Panthers led 23-20 heading into halftime.
Both teams had better offensive success pushing the ball when it could in the second half.
Saint Jo broke Nocona’s press and punished the Indians with quick baskets. Nocona ran whenever it could and seemed to put up an array of perimeter shots and drives, getting offensive rebounds it seemed at will to keep the pressure up and infuriate the Panthers coach.
The Indians got a big push from Landon Fatheree in the second half. After scoring eight points in the first half to lead the team, he scored 10 of his team’s 14 points in the third quarter.
Nocona got the lead back, but only led 34-33 heading into the final period.
The Indians had a comfortable lead up 44-36 when Saint Jo’s Gaston fouled out with 4:56 left in the game. Still, the Panthers did not give up and a minute later had whittled Nocona’s lead down to one basket 44-41 with 3:45.
The game stayed a one-possession game for the next two minutes as Saint Jo had several chances to tie or take the lead not go through.
Nocona made its free throws down the stretch to win with a little more comfort, with the final score being 55-48.
To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekend edition of the Bowie News. To see more pictures, click here https://www.dotphoto.com/go.asp?l=bnews1&AID=6870682&T=1
SPORTS
Nocona’s Meekins signs to Lubbock Christian
Nocona senior Meg Meekins signed her official letter of intent to play college basketball at Lubbock Christian University on Wednesday. Meekins, the daughter of Brandi and Lance, is a four-year starter on the volleyball and basketball court. She has earned several accolades like being named to the All State Teams for TGCA, TABC, Associated Press and was selected to the All Tournament Team at the UIL State Basketball Tournament in San Antonio last year.“The coaching staff and the community of the LCU program and just knowing you have a staff that coaches you, but also looks over you just like Coach (Kyle) Spitzer did here was a huge part in the recruiting process,” Meekins said. She plans to pursue a degree in either physical or occupational therapy.
For more pictures, click here https://www.dotphoto.com/go.asp?l=bnews1&AID=6870680&T=1
SPORTS
Bowie girls survive Bellevue 44-40
The Bowie Lady Rabbits got more than they bargained for when they traveled to Bellevue on Tuesday night.
The Lady Rabbits escaped with the win 44-40, taking the lead with less than a minute to go after trailing whole game.
Bowie came into the game confident. The larger 3A school was supposed to play Windthorst, but had to reschedule because the Lady Trojans volleyball team was playing in the state tournament.
Finding a last minute replacement, the Lady Rabbits thought they would have an easy game playing the 1A program down the road. Little did they know.
Bellevue had a couple of players out with injury to limit its depth a bit and a new coach in Celsey Hoffman, but the Lady Eagles were coming off of nearly beating a Nocona team the previous week. While the Lady Indians were missing four starters who were still in volleyball, it still showed this was not a 1A team to take lightly.
Bellevue came out fast showing tough defensive pressure despite giving up size at nearly every position. Within a few minutes the Lady Eagles had used that pressure to force turnovers and convert those steals into transition opportunities.
Also, the energy showed in other areas as Bellevue seemed to grab every loose ball and fought for offensive rebounds despite lacking in height compared to Bowie.
After a little more than four minutes into the game the Lady Eagles led 15-0. The Lady Rabbits had barely been able to set up their offense or attempt a shot against the pressure.
Bowie Coach Matthew Miller had to reset his shell-shocked team during multiple timeouts. The young ballhandlers was reminded how the team was going to break the press defense so it could set up its offense.
Bellevue led 19-4 after the first quarter, led by Mary Grace Broussard and Brittany Gill who each scored six points.
The Lady Rabbits settled down and made some good progress in the second quarter. Their defense switched between man-to-man and 1-3-1 to keep the Lady Eagles off balance. With them taking care of the ball better, there were less chances for Bellevue in transition and the Lady Eagles offense struggled to consistently find ways to score against Bowie’s length.
The Lady Rabbits offense found some success as well. Five different players made at least one basket and the team made two 3-pointers.
While the game was physical from the start, now that Bowie knew what type of game it was in the team responded back. It was not pretty and only enough fouls were called to make the game watchable, but individual foul trouble affected Bellevue harder than the Lady Rabbits in the second quarter.
The Lady Eagles still led heading into halftime, but Bowie had gotten it down to single digits trailing 25-19.
The third quarter was more even between the two teams as both had trouble consistently scoring baskets. Bellevue made three baskets and a couple of free throws to keep ahead.
The Lady Rabbits got a big lift from Lanie Moore, who knocked in all three of her 3-pointers in the quarter, scoring nine of the team’s 12 points.
Bowie still trailed, but had cut the lead down to one point earlier in the quarter and one basket 34-31 heading into the fourth quarter.
Bellevue grew the lead to 38-32 early in the final period. The Lady Rabbits struggled to get anything going offensively and trailed 40-34 midway through the quarter.
Bowie’s Kendall Fallis made a 3-pointer in transition to cut the lead to one basket 40-37.
The score stayed there for the next several minutes even as the Lady Eagles had two starters, Karis Denson and Mattie Broussard, foul out of the game.
With a little more than a minute left, the Lady Rabbits drew up and out of bounds play that got Laney Segura an open shot in the corner. Despite not having made a basket all game, she sunk the 3-pointer to tie the game at 40-40 with a minute still to play.
Bowie had been in a pressure defense for the second half of the fourth quarter to prevent Bellevue from passively running clock. Still in the defense, the team next stole the in-bounds pass and Railey Martin made the undefended layup to give the Lady Rabbits their first lead of the game 42-40 with 48 seconds left.
The Lady Eagles could not tie the score on their next offensive possession. Bowie would made two more free throws to make the final 44-40.
To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekend edition of the Bowie News. For more pictures from the game, click here https://www.dotphoto.com/go.asp?l=bnews1&AID=6870678&T=1
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