Park View High (Sterling) | Archive | October, 2006

Park View and Deric Dudinski Quietly Make Themselves Welcome at Dominion’s Homecoming

 

Sterling (Oct. 24, 2006) – Friday’s Homecoming game at Dominion High
School where the Titans hosted their South of Route 7 neighbor Park
View posed several interesting questions. Can a running back “quietly”
pick up 250 yards rushing and score three touchdowns and can a team
lose 35-7 but show vast improvement?

The answer to both of those questions was “yes” as the area’s
leading rusher, Patriot senior Deric Dudinski not only picked up the
250 yards but became his school’s all-time No. 2 leading rushing,
surpassing former Notre Dame and NFL star Allen Pinkett, in
unheralded fashion and the host Titans made a statement about how far
they have progressed despite the final score.

Park View (2-0 in Dulles District, 6-1 overall) now hosts the other
undefeated Dulles team, Potomac Falls, this Friday. Dominion (1-1, 3-4)
travels to face Heritage.

For starters Friday, the game was much closer than the final score
indicates as it should have been 14-14 at the half, save for two big
momentum-shifting plays: Park View senior defensive back Justin Denekas
tracking down Dominion quarterback Craig Carlson from behind in the
first quarter and not only making a touchdown-saving tackle at
the Patriot 5 on Carlson’s 44-yard run but popping the ball loose for a
key turnover; and Dudinski’s 59-yard touchdown run with 1:04 left in
the second quarter on the first play from scrimmage after Dominion had
cut Park View’s lead to 14-7.

Until that point, the Dominion defense had held the explosive
Dudinski fairly in check, yet his touchdown gave Park View the 21-7
lead at the half, vaulted him for good past Pinkett, and left him
“quietly” with 176 yards in the first two quarters.

“Dudinski is a great back. Unfortunately he doesn’t live on this
side of Route 7,” said Dominon coach Mike Dougherty referring to the
school boundary shared by the two Sterling schools.

Dominion, a team which looked much better than the squad that had
fallen in its last home game to Wakefield, came out strong in the
second half, holding Park View to three-and-out on their first series
and then the Titan’s big-play man Chris Brent intercepted Park View
quarterback C.J. Leizear at the Titan 32.

Edris Amin then picked up 13 and 14 yards on back-to-back carries to
move the ball into Patriot territory. Amin finished the night with 91
yards on 19 attempts as the Titans had their best ground game of the
year with 183 yards rushing. Just as things were going Dominion’s way,
disaster struck as Carlson, running the option near the Park View
sideline, attempted to cut back across the field and was caught by the
Patriot defensive pursuit just as he was twisting around. Carlson had
to be helped off the field and the injury was later to be revealed as a
broken leg which will keep him out of the rest of the season.

Park View held and then put the game away with a 10-play, 82-yard
drive that culminated in Leizear’s 25-yard touchdown pass to Ameichi
Anyaugo. Dougherty, for one, doesn’t see anybody stopping Park View the
rest of the regular season.

“I see them running the table in district,” Dougherty said.

Dudinski finished his night with a 25-yard touchdown run with 21
seconds left in the third quarter to finish the scoring on the night.
Dudinski’s unofficial career numbers are now 4,839 yards rushing in his
four seasons and he is within 318 of Tony Conway’s school record of
5,157 set in the late 1980s.

“He’s amazing and it is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Park View coach Andy Hill.

Park View tried to take Dominion’s large Homecoming crowd out of the
game early as Eric Johnston broke through and partially blocked
Dominion’s punt on their first series. The special teams play gave Park
View the ball at the Dominion 41 and it took just six plays for Leizear
to move the team down the field and his 13-yard scoring pass to Danny
Foley gave Park View the early lead. Leizear had developed a nice cadre
of receivers this season including Anyuago, Foley and Ryan Pick.

It looked as if Dominion would strike right back as on the second
play after the Patriot touchdown, just about every Park View defender
went after Amin on a nice dive fake from Carlson.

“If we execute, we can fool you,” Dougherty said.

Fool, they did, as Carlson rounded the right end unnoticed and was
off into the Patriot secondary. Denekas closed on Carlson just in time
and brought his arm down as hard as he could on the tackle attempt and
the blow forced the ball loose.

“We work on that technique in practice. I thought (Carlson) had scored. It was absolutely a huge play,” Hill said.

Park View drove back down to the Dominion 33, with Dudinski picking
up 42 yards on a play that could have been an 83-yard touchdown but he
stepped out of bounds. The Titans, however, stuffed Thomas Mulabah on
4th-and-2.

Dominon moved the ball well and got inside the Patriot red zone but
a Carlson fumble on 2nd-and-2 from the Patriot 22 took the wind out of
their sails as the Titans recovered the ball but lost seven yards.
Another loss left Dominion with a 48-yard field goal attempt by Tommy
Kowalick which was short, but just as effective as a punt.

The Patriots then went to business with a time-consuming 18-play,
80-yard drive that featured 10 Dudinski runs, the final a touchdown
from the 1 on 3rd-and-goal.

Trailing 14-0, Dominion went to the air with Carlson completing
passes to Cam Everett for 19 and Brent for 13 yards. Carlson then found
Brent for a super catch in the end zone from 18 yards out to slice the
lead to 14-7 with 1:22 left in the half.

Mulabah took the kickoff and returned it 16 yards before Dominon
could throw enough bodies in the way of his hulking 280-pound frame. In
what would have been a two-minute drill for most teams, was a Dudinski
handoff for Park View and the shifty senior busted off-tackle, cut back
against the pursuit and out-raced the Titans to the end zone for a
59-yard score.

“Dudinski was close to breaking it all night. He is a nice option to have in the two-minute drill,” Hill said.

Anyuago then made one of his two interceptions on the night to prevent Dominion from answering Dudinski’s body blow.

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Stone Bridge Tops in Northern Region Division 5;

 By: Dan Sousa

Football – Vhsl ratings

Briar Woods Moving Up in Region II Division 3 Ratings

 

(Oct. 23, 2006) – In the lates VHSL football ratings released today,
Stone Bridge High School continues to lead the Northern Region Division
5 points race with Park View No. 2 in Region II Division 4.

The VHSL uses a points-based rating system to help determine playoff
teams in football. The four districts in the AAA Northern Region and AA
Region II are divided between two divisions for the playoff —
Divisions 5 and 6 in AAA and Division 3 and 4 in AA. A total of four
playoff teams make the postseason in each division or eight teams from
each region. After the four district champions are determined in each
region, then the remaining four playoff spots are allocated to the
teams with the highest points ratings. District title ties are also
broken by the all-important points ratings.

Stone Bridge leads all Division 5 teams in the Northern Region with
24.6 points followed by Yorktown (22.4), South County (22.3) and Edison
(21.1). Just outside the playoff picture are Marshall (20.7), Madison
(19.7) and Loudoun Valley (19.1).

In Region II, Shernado leads Division 4 with a 24.4 rating followed
by Park View (23.7), Liberty (23.4) and Louisa County (22.7). Just
outside the playoff picture in this highly competitive division are
Harrisonburg (20.8), James Wood (20.1), Monticell0 (20.0) and Potomac
Falls (19.3).

In Region II Division 3, Briar Woods has moved up to 15.8. R.E. Lee
leads the division with 19.6 followed by Millbrook (18.1), Brentsville
(17.0) and Handley (16.9). Turner Ashby (15.9), Briar Woods and
Rockbridge (15.6) are close behind.

VHSL Points Ratings

AAA Northern Region Division 5

Stone Bridge 24.6

Yorktown 22.4

South County 22.3

Edison 21.1

Marshall 20.7

Madison 19.7

Loudoun Valley (19.1)

Mount Vernon (17.9)

South Lakes (16.1)

Washington-Lee (16.1)

Falls Church (15.3)

Wakefield (15.1)

McLean (14.6)

Hayfield (14.6)

Stuart (11.7)

 

AA Region II Division 4

Sherando 24.4

Park View 23.7

Liberty 23.4

Louisa County 22.7

Harrisonburg 20.8

James Wood 20.1

Monticello 20.0

Potomac Falls 19.3

Broad Run 17.0

Orange 16.0

Heritage 15.0

Charlottesville 14.9

Warren County 13.5

Spotswood 13.1

Loudoun County 9.7

 

AA Region II Division 3

R.E. Lee 19.6

Millbrook 18.1

Brentsville 17.0

Handley 16.9

Turner Ashby 15.9

Briar Woods 15.8

Western Albemarle 15.6

Rockbridge 15.6

Dominion 13.7

Broadway 13.6

Central 13.1

Fort Defiance 11.1

Stuarts Draft 11.0

Freedom 10.8

Fluvanna 10.8

Waynesboro 10.7

William Monroe 8.1

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A Whole Lot of Ratings Going On …

By: Dan Sousa

(Oct. 17, 2006) – Associated Press, VHSL rating … you name it and the Stone Bridge and Park View High School football teams are ranked high these days. Here is the latest:


VHSL Rating: Stone Bridge is No. 3 in AAA Division 5 behind Phoebus and Matoaca. Park View is tied for No. 2 with Liberty behind Sherando.


Associated Press Top 10: Stone Bridge is No. 4 in AAA; Park View is No. 9


VHSL Ratings 


Northern Region AAA Division 5


Stone Bridge 24.2


Edison 21.3


South County 20.8


Yorktown 2o.2


Marshall 19.7


Loudoun Valley 17.3


South Lakes 16.5


Madison 16.2


Mount Vernon 16.2


Thomas Jefferson 15.3


Wakefield 15.3


Falls Church 15.0


Washington-Lee 14.8


Hayfield 14.3


McLean 13.7


Stuart 11.3


 


AA Region II Division 4


Sherando 24.0


Liberty 23.0


Park View 23.0


Louisa County 20.8


Monticello 20.3


Harrisonburg 19.7


James Wood 18.8


Potomac Falls 18.5


Orange 16.2


Heritage 15.3


Broad Run 15.0


Charlottesville 14.3


Warren County 13.8


Spotswood 12.5


Loudoun County 9.0


 


AA Region II Division 3


R.E. Lee 18.3


Millbrook 17.7


Handley 17.3


Brentsville 17.2


Turner Ashby 15.7


Rockbridge 14.8


Briar Woods 14.2


Broadway 14.0


Western Albemarle 13.8


Dominion 13.3


Central 12.8


Fort Defiance 11.3


Stuarts Draft 11.0


Fluvanna 10.7


Freedom 10.5


Waynesboro 8.7


William Monroe 7.7


 

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Heritage Improves to 11-0 in District with Win

By: Dan Sousa


(Oct. 17, 2006) – Heritage High School is now three games away from a perfect 14-0 Group AA Dulles District volleyball season after defeating Park View 25-8, 25-13, 25-21 Monday night.


Gaby Galvan and Alana Rudkovsky each had 12 points in the win. Rudkovsky’s total included six aces. Rachel Young had seven kills, two blocks and six digs. Lauren Bulka and Kelly McFarland combined for 15 points and Katherine Buttery had 15 assists.


Galvan also had five digs on the night.


The Pride have remaining district tilts against Briar Woods, Potomac Falls and Loudoun County. 

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Dudinski Breaks 1,000-yard Mark, Gaining on Pinkett

 By: Dan Sousa

Sterling (Oct. 17, 2006) – Park View senior running back Deric
Dudinski is having such a good season that he broke the 1,000-yard mark
Friday night in the Patriots 37-14 win over Heritage and it wasn’t a
big deal.

That is because Dudinski is likely to break greater marks than the
1,00o-plateau this season as he needs just 94 yards this Friday against
Dominion to match Allen Pinkett’s all-time career rushing yards No. 2
mark of 4,683 yards. Dudinski also has a good shot breaking the
all-time mark of 5,157 set by Tony Conway in the late 1980s.

Pinkett went on to star at Notre Dame and play for the Houston Oilers in the NFL.

Dudinski has 1,057 yards this season and 4,589 in his career.

Where are they now? Allen Pinkett

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A Whole Lot of Ratings Going On …

By: Dan Sousa

(Oct. 17, 2006) – Associated Press, VirginiaPreps.com,
VHSL rating … you name it and the Stone Bridge and Park View High
School football teams are ranked high these days. Here is the latest:

VHSL Rating: Stone Bridge is No. 3 in AAA Division 5 behind Phoebus and Matoaca. Park View is tied for No. 2 with Liberty behind Sherando.

Associated Press Top 10: Stone Bridge is No. 4 in AAA; Park View is No. 9

VirginiaPreps.com Top 10: Stone Bridge is No. 3; Park View is No. 7

 

VHSL Ratings 

Northern Region AAA Division 5

Stone Bridge 24.2

Edison 21.3

South County 20.8

Yorktown 2o.2

Marshall 19.7

Loudoun Valley 17.3

South Lakes 16.5

Madison 16.2

Mount Vernon 16.2

Thomas Jefferson 15.3

Wakefield 15.3

Falls Church 15.0

Washington-Lee 14.8

Hayfield 14.3

McLean 13.7

Stuart 11.3

 

AA Region II Division 4

Sherando 24.0

Liberty 23.0

Park View 23.0

Louisa County 20.8

Monticello 20.3

Harrisonburg 19.7

James Wood 18.8

Potomac Falls 18.5

Orange 16.2

Heritage 15.3

Broad Run 15.0

Charlottesville 14.3

Warren County 13.8

Spotswood 12.5

Loudoun County 9.0

 

AA Region II Division 3

R.E. Lee 18.3

Millbrook 17.7

Handley 17.3

Brentsville 17.2

Turner Ashby 15.7

Rockbridge 14.8

Briar Woods 14.2

Broadway 14.0

Western Albemarle 13.8

Dominion 13.3

Central 12.8

Fort Defiance 11.3

Stuarts Draft 11.0

Fluvanna 10.7

Freedom 10.5

Waynesboro 8.7

William Monroe 7.7

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Park View Defeats Heritage in Match-up of 2005 Group AA Dulles District Co-Champs

 By: Dan Sousa


Sterling (Oct. 14, 2006) – It took the Park View High School defense one play Friday night to establish the tone for its match-up with Group AA Dulles District co-champion Heritage as the hard-hitting Patriots forced the first of five turnovers.


The Patriots defeated the Pride 20-12 last season, but had to settle for a co-championship when both teams finished 4-1 in district play. If Friday’s game is any indication, Park View is not about share anything this season as the Patriots, behind a defense that limited Heritage to 77 total yards, defeated the Pride 37-14 before an appreciative homecoming crowd.


Out to prove once again that they are the top team in the Dulles, the Patriot defense swarmed Heritage quarterback Kyle Nelson on the first snap from scrimmage Friday, forcing a fumble, and setting up a quick C.J. Leizear to Amechi Anyaugo 24-yard touchdown pass.


Heritage then failed to cover a short kickoff and Patriot senior Nathan White hustled down and recovered the live ball on the Pride 28.


“The ball took a bounce in our direction. They were a little shell-shocked,” said Hill.


The stunned Heritage defense was back on the field and on the first play Park View coach Andy Hill pulled out something from deep in his playbook. Freshman wide receiver Kenny Griffin, who had not carried the ball this season, took a snap in the backfield while Leizear faked a handoff to Park View’s feared running back Deric Dudinski. As Dudinski carried out the deception to the right, Griffin, after hesitating with the ball for a count, took off around the left end and the 5-foot-4, 122-pounder scooted 21 yards before the Pride figured out the play. On the next play, Leizear with time to spare in the pocket, found 6-foot-4 sophomore Kenny Smith lurking near the back of the end zone and the 7-yard touchdown pass made it 14-0.


At this point the Pride had had the ball for 11 seconds and trailed by two scores.


“We started off real hot,” said Hill.


A quick three-and-out by the Pride offense and the game threatened to become a real blowout. The Pride defense, however, recovered nicely with Bryan McCarthy intercepting a long Leizear pass at the Heritage 4. Over the next 25 minutes, the Pride kept the Patriots out of the end zone, controlling the elusive Dudinski to just 82 yards on 18 carries, well below his 195-yard per game average coming in.


“They had some zone-type blitzing schemes that worked. There were linebackers in my backfield and defensive tackles down field making tackles,” said Hill.


Heritage even threatened to tie the game as the Pride marched 63 yards in the second quarter on a 10-play drive that was capped by Darius Tibbs’ circus catch on 4th-and-goal from the 4 with 2:19 to play in the half. Nelson had kept the drive alive with a key 16-yard scramble on 3rd-and-11 and a 3rd-and-6 incompletion later in the drive was salvaged by a Patriot illegal contact penalty.


Despite that disastrous opening, the Pride threatened to tie the game when a Dudinski punt went off the side of his foot and traveled only two yards before landing amid the Patriot cheerleaders. The Pride took over at the Patriot 27 with 49 seconds left in the half.


Nelson hit running back Sean McCoy for a 15-yard game to move the ball to the 8 but the Patriot defense came up big, sacking Nelson on the next play for an 8-yard loss. On the night, the Patriots harassed Nelson every time he dropped back, stopping him behind the line of scrimmage eight times in the game. Nelson’s sacks left him minus-30 yards on the night in 17 carries and the Pride offense as a whole had minus-24 yards rushing on 23 attempts.


Out of timeouts, the Pride had to spike the ball after the sack to stop the clock. That brought up fourth down and the Pride sent the field goal unit out only to get hit with a delay of game penalty before snapping the ball. Pushed back, James Mallon’s 38-yard attempt was no good and Heritage had lost its chance for some halftime momentum.


In the second half the Patriot offense moved the ball efficiently on the opening series but stalled at the Pride 17 and Clayton Parker’s 35-yard field goal attempt was no good. Neither team could generate offense on the next two series so the Patriot defense took things into their own hands. On 1st-and-10 from their own 31, McCoy was hit by Park View linebacker Chris Davies in the backfield and the ball popped loose. Park View’s 6-foot-1, 287-pound defensive tackle Corbin Barnes scooped up the loose ball and rumbled 26 yards for his second career touchdown. Parker’s extra point made it 21-7 Park View with 3:47 to play in the third.


“I was like: ‘Is this really happening’,” said Barnes about his touchdown return.


White, around the ball all night, intercepted Nelson two plays later but Park View gave it back to Heritage when Pride defensive back Bobby Edmonds intercepted Leizear around the Pride 10. Edmonds is one of the fastest players in the Dulles District and he raced along his own sidelines, threatening to go 90 yards for the score … only a determined Dudinski sprinted after Edmonds and dragged him down from behind at the Patriot 32.


The 58-yard return set up Heritage for a short drive and on the first play of the fourth quarter, Nelson (11 of 19, 101 yards) hit Edmonds in stride as he raced down the left sidelines for a 31-yard touchdown. Mallon’s extra point left Heritage just a score behind.


The Patriot defense had taken the game into their own hands most of the night and it would be no different on the ensuing kickoff as 6-foot-3, 280-pound Thomas Mulabah, fielded the Pride squib kick at his 36 and instead of just falling on the ball, Mulabah starting plowing straight ahead and the first couple of Heritage defenders that got in his way felt the full brunt of his size as he moved forward and wasn’t stopped until he reached the Pride 40.


“He can run pretty hard,” said Hill of Mulabah.


Heritage held Dudinski to three yards total the next two carries but on 3rd-and-7, the Pride defense was keyed on Dudinski, and Anyaugo got the call instead. He went 14 yards for the first down at the Pride 24. Heritage stiffened on defense and Hill sent Parker out for his second field goal try of the night — a 34-yarder that was good to give the Patriots a cushion at 24-14 with just under eight minutes to play. It was the first field goal made since Hill took over as coach last season.


Any hopes of a Pride comeback were dashed by the relentless Patriot defense as they sacked Nelson on back-to-back plays and then intercepted the ball on third-and-29. Park View finished off the job when Anyaugo hit a wide open Danny Foley on a 19-yard option pass on the very next play.


Park View’s best drive of the night, a 73-yard march in the closing minutes closed out the scoring as Dudinski, who had a 41-yard touchdown called back on the drive, scored from seven yards out with 1:52 to play. Dudinski would have easily broken the 100-yard mark in the game except for that penalty and an earlier penalty in the first half which wiped out a nice run.


Leizear finished the night 13 of 18 for 128 yards and he got just about everybody involved as he hit seven different receivers.


“This game was huge. It gives us a little bit of breathing room,” said Hill.


 

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Title Defense: Park View Defeats Heritage in Match-up of 2005 Group AA Dulles District Co-Champions

 

By Dan Sousa
Loudoun Prep Sports Editor

 

Sterling (Oct. 14, 2006) – It took the Park View High School defense
one play Friday night to establish the tone for its match-up with Group
AA Dulles District co-champion Heritage as the hard-hitting Patriots
forced the first of five turnovers.

The Patriots defeated the Pride 20-12 last season, but had to settle
for a co-championship when both teams finished 4-1 in district play. If
Friday’s game is any indication, Park View is not about share anything
this season as the Patriots, behind a defense that limited Heritage to
77 total yards, defeated the Pride 37-14 before an
appreciative homecoming crowd.

Out to prove once again that they are the top team in the Dulles,
the Patriot defense swarmed Heritage quarterback Kyle Nelson on the
first snap from scrimmage Friday, forcing a fumble, and setting up a
quick C.J. Leizear to Amechi Anyaugo 24-yard touchdown pass.

Heritage then failed to cover a short kickoff and Patriot senior
Nathan White hustled down and recovered the live ball on the Pride 28.

“The ball took a bounce in our direction. They were a little shell-shocked,” said Hill.

The stunned Heritage defense was back on the field and on the first
play Park View coach Andy Hill pulled out something from deep in his
playbook. Freshman wide receiver Kenny Griffin, who had not carried the
ball this season, took a snap in the backfield while Leizear faked a
handoff to Park View’s feared running back Deric Dudinski. As Dudinski
carried out the deception to the right, Griffin, after hesitating with
the ball for a count, took off around the left end and the 5-foot-4,
122-pounder scooted 21 yards before the Pride figured out the play. On
the next play, Leizear with time to spare in the pocket, found 6-foot-4
sophomore Kenny Smith lurking near the back of the end zone and the
7-yard touchdown pass made it 14-0.

At this point the Pride had had the ball for 11 seconds and trailed by two scores.

“We started off real hot,” said Hill.

A quick three-and-out by the Pride offense and the game threatened
to become a real blowout. The Pride defense, however, recovered nicely
with Bryan McCarthy intercepting a long Leizear pass at the Heritage 4.
Over the next 25 minutes, the Pride kept the Patriots out of the end
zone, controlling the elusive Dudinski to just 82 yards on 18 carries,
well below his 195-yard per game average coming in.

“They had some zone-type blitzing schemes that worked. There were
linebackers in my backfield and defensive tackles down field making
tackles,” said Hill.

Heritage even threatened to tie the game as the Pride marched 63
yards in the second quarter on a 10-play drive that was capped by
Darius Tibbs’ circus catch on 4th-and-goal from the 4 with 2:19 to play
in the half. Nelson had kept the drive alive with a key 16-yard
scramble on 3rd-and-11 and a 3rd-and-6 incompletion later in the drive
was salvaged by a Patriot illegal contact penalty.

Despite that disastrous opening, the Pride threatened to tie the
game when a Dudinski punt went off the side of his foot and traveled
only two yards before landing amid the Patriot cheerleaders. The Pride
took over at the Patriot 27 with 49 seconds left in the half.

Nelson hit running back Sean McCoy for a 15-yard game to move the
ball to the 8 but the Patriot defense came up big, sacking Nelson on
the next play for an 8-yard loss. On the night, the Patriots harassed
Nelson every time he dropped back, stopping him behind the line of
scrimmage eight times in the game. Nelson’s sacks left him minus-30
yards on the night in 17 carries and the Pride offense as a whole had
minus-24 yards rushing on 23 attempts.

Out of timeouts, the Pride had to spike the ball after the sack to
stop the clock. That brought up fourth down and the Pride sent the
field goal unit out only to get hit with a delay of game penalty before
snapping the ball. Pushed back, James Mallon’s 38-yard attempt was no
good and Heritage had lost its chance for some halftime momentum.

In the second half the Patriot offense moved the ball efficiently on
the opening series but stalled at the Pride 17 and Clayton Parker’s
35-yard field goal attempt was no good. Neither team could generate
offense on the next two series so the Patriot defense took things into
their own hands. On 1st-and-10 from their own 31, McCoy was hit by Park
View linebacker Chris Davies in the backfield and the ball popped
loose. Park View’s 6-foot-1, 287-pound defensive tackle Corbin Barnes
scooped up the loose ball and rumbled 26 yards for his second career
touchdown. Parker’s extra point made it 21-7 Park View with 3:47 to
play in the third.

“I was like: ‘Is this really happening’,” said Barnes about his touchdown return.

White, around the ball all night, intercepted Nelson two plays later
but Park View gave it back to Heritage when Pride defensive back Bobby
Edmonds intercepted Leizear around the Pride 10. Edmonds is one of the
fastest players in the Dulles District and he raced along his own
sidelines, threatening to go 90 yards for the score … only a
determined Dudinski sprinted after Edmonds and dragged him down from
behind at the Patriot 32.

The 58-yard return set up Heritage for a short drive and on the
first play of the fourth quarter, Nelson (11 of 19, 101 yards) hit
Edmonds in stride as he raced down the left sidelines for a 31-yard
touchdown. Mallon’s extra point left Heritage just a score behind.

The Patriot defense had taken the game into their own hands most of
the night and it would be no different on the ensuing kickoff as
6-foot-3, 280-pound Thomas Mulabah, fielded the Pride squib kick at his
36 and instead of just falling on the ball, Mulabah starting plowing
straight ahead and the first couple of Heritage defenders that got in
his way felt the full brunt of his size as he moved forward and wasn’t
stopped until he reached the Pride 40.

“He can run pretty hard,” said Hill of Mulabah.

Heritage held Dudinski to three yards total the next two carries but
on 3rd-and-7, the Pride defense was keyed on Dudinski, and Anyaugo got
the call instead. He went 14 yards for the first down at the Pride 24.
Heritage stiffened on defense and Hill sent Parker out for his second
field goal try of the night — a 34-yarder that was good to give the
Patriots a cushion at 24-14 with just under eight minutes to play. It
was the first field goal made since Hill took over as coach last season.

Any hopes of a Pride comeback were dashed by the relentless Patriot
defense as they sacked Nelson on back-to-back plays and then
intercepted the ball on third-and-29. Park View finished off the job
when Anyaugo hit a wide open Danny Foley on a 19-yard option pass on
the very next play.

Park View’s best drive of the night, a 73-yard march in the closing
minutes closed out the scoring as Dudinski, who had a 41-yard touchdown
called back on the drive, scored from seven yards out with 1:52 to
play. Dudinski would have easily broken the 100-yard mark in the game
except for that penalty and an earlier penalty in the first half which
wiped out a nice run.

Leizear finished the night 13 of 18 for 128 yards and he got just about everybody involved as he hit seven different receivers.

“This game was huge. It gives us a little bit of breathing room,” said Hill.

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Loudoun County Defeats Park View

By: Dan Sousa

 

(Oct. 11, 2006) – Loudoun County, coming off back-to-back big wins
over Broad Run and Loudoun Valley, quickly took care of Park View
Tuesday night, defeating the Patriots 25-3, 25-16, 25-13 in a Group AA
Dulles District match.

The Raiders were led by junior Marguerite Hanna who had an
outstanding all-around performance with eight kills, two solo blocks,
two block assists, six digs, 15 service points, and two aces. 

Also for County, senior Amanda Arbogast added four kills, a solo
block, four block assists, four digs, seven service points, and two
aces, and freshman Julliane Hanna had four kills and three digs. 

Rebecca Dancy had nine digs and nine service points for the Raiders
and  Katie Martin added 13 assists, 17 points, and five aces, and the
setter even had a block assist.

Megan Brown paced the Patriot attack with eight kills.

Loudoun County improved to 7-1 in district and 12-2 overall, while Park View slipped to 4-6 and 5-6.

The Raiders won both the junior varsity and freshman games by 2-0 scores.

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Park View Retires Jeff Lageman’s No. 88 Patriot Jersey in Pregame Ceremony Friday Night

By Dena Parnis
Special to Loudoun Prep Sports

 

Sterling (Oct. 8, 2006) – On an evening that can only be described
as “football weather” Park View High School retired the No. 88 jersey
Friday night of Jeff Lageman, a former Patriot player who went on to
star at Virginia and in the NFL.

Park View principal Dr. Virginia Minshew opened the ceremony, held
prior to the Park View-Martinsburg WV game, by introducing the various
members present to honor Lageman, including assistant principals,
various School Board members, Patriot athletic director Joe Breinig,
Jr., Jeff Lageman, his wife, parents and brother, along with Ed Scott,
Lageman’s former Park View football coach.

Scott spoke eloquently of having the privilege of coaching Lageman
as a young player and the various qualities that he brought to the
program.  Scott said that Lageman was not only a good football player,
but a good person, who always did what was asked. Scott mentioned that
Lageman had an opportunity to go to Oakton High School, but decided
instead to take a chance on a young Park View High School football
program.

Lageman started his speech on the rainy night by mentioning one word
that described Scott’s coaching “intensity”. Lageman thanked his
immediate family members and expressed his love for his parents, his
brother and his wife. With a tear in his eye, he spoke fondly of his
extended family in Sterling Park, the various families who always had
an open door for him. He listed the families by name and thanked them
for their generosity. Lageman went on to talk about the various events
in his life that helped him become the man he was today. He spoke of
the wonderful memories of starting his football career by playing in
the Lower Loudoun Football League. Lageman recited the names of the
various members of the LLFBL who were a part of the wonderful
organization when he played. Lageman spoke of their true love of
football and their unselfish commitment as they “gave their time on
Saturdays to teach the boys of Sterling Park the game of football.” 

The inscription on the plaque of Lageman’s retired jersey reads: “Forever a Patriot, Jeff Lageman, 1985-1989”.

Lageman, who  also played baseball during his time at Park View,
helped the football team to three district titles and the baseball team
won a state title in 1984.

Lageman went on to play his college ball at the University of
Virginia. He was a first round draft pick in the NFL, chosen as the
14th player by the New York Jets. He played for the Jets for six years.
Lageman then became a member of the Jacksonville Jaguars in 1996 and
spent four years with them until his retirement from football. Lageman
is now the color analyst for a local TV show, “Jaguars This Week”, in
Jacksonville. He is also actively involved in the charity “Children’s
Miracle Network”.

Prior to the ceremony Lageman said that he was “excited and honored to be here.” 
Scott said that Friday’s festivities were “very exciting and (the
honor) is well-deserved.  (Lageman) has brought recognition to our
program and I am glad to see him recognized.”

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