Panthers off to the perfect start they envisioned

By DOUG IRELAND, Journal Sports

Don’t you love it when a plan comes together?

That is happening for the Parkway Panthers football team and coach Coy Brotherton.

After a convincing 24-6 homefield victory over rival Haughton in the league opener, the Panthers were a unanimous choice as the Shreveport-Bossier Journal Team of the Week.

Not only is Parkway unbeaten through four games, and 1-0 in District 1-5A, but the Panthers’ defense hasn’t given up a point in three games. That piece wasn’t in Brotherton’s plan – but a clean start was in his vision.

No disrespect to the non-district opponents – Minden, Red River and Bossier – but they were all lower-division teams that a solid Parkway program expects to handle. Other than the opening 43-41 escape from the Crimson Tide, the Panthers have cruised forward, outscoring the next three teams 108-6.

But starting district against the Bucs provided a stiff test, which Parkway passed, opening a 24-0 halftime lead. The Bucs were playing without their starting quarterback and lost a key lineman, and their only score came on a long fourth-quarter fumble return.

The following game – this Friday’s encounter with another 1-0 district foe, Captain Shreve – completes a pivotal two-step for Parkway’s chances to be dancing into postseason.

“It (4-0) was attainable,” said Brotherton. “We knew all spring to this point, these first two district games will kinda make or break our year, show us where we’re going to be able to aim at the end of the (district) season.”

The Panthers were confident about their defense, and had no worries in the kicking game with Aeron Burrell back for his senior season as unquestionably one of the country’s top specialists.

Parkway installed a different defensive scheme this year, running a “Bear” defense (mostly a 5-2 front), counting on its veteran players to make the adjustment. They certainly have done so in the past three games.

“We did have some guys back on defense, so that was going to be a plus for us,” said Brotherton. “The defense has played well the last three weeks. We struggled in Week 1 at Minden, and that was alarming.

“Our defensive coaches, coach (Dillion) Jackson and his guys, got those kids ready to play. In the last three weeks, we haven’t given up a touchdown, so that’s good. And we’ve scored in every game on defense. That’s pretty impressive, what they’ve been able to do.”

As for Burrell, his kicking and punting have been as flawless as expected, and he’s getting better now.

“He’s not even 100 percent yet, battling some injuries from last year, but in the last three weeks he’s started to look healthy again and that’s been a bonus,” said Brotherton. “This (Haughton) was the first game he’s kicked off the entire game, because we were just easing him back into it, but he’s a full go now.”

The key questions offensively were in the backfield. So far, they’ve been exclamation points.

“It’s been good to get Antonio Gladney at running back and KB (Kaleb Williams) at quarterback some experience under their belts,” said Brotherton, whose offense is averaging 30 points per game. “They’ve gotten better each week – that’s always the goal, I know coaches say that all the time – but for us and our youth, that was important and it looks like they’ve done that.”

The Panthers’ secret to success is pretty basic.

“We’ve done a good job getting better each week. We’ve done well protecting the football. Those are things we need to continue to do,” said Brotherton. “When you’re young at key positions, they can look good one play and then do something bone-headed the next one. We’ve got to continue to eliminate those bone-headed plays.”

The defense, the heartbeat of this Parkway team, is particularly critical this week. Coming off a rivalry win, and facing an explosive, multi-dimensional Shreve offense, Parkway must be focused. Brotherton has no worries about that aspect.

“We’ve counted on those (defensive) guys to be leaders this year,” he said. “We have a good group of kids who have bought into the system. This is our fourth year here as a staff, so we’re the only coaches they know.

“They’re good kids to be around. I don’t think the emotions of last week will have any ill effect on the way they prepare this week.”

Contact Doug at sbjdoug@gmail.com


Airline breaks into LSWA Class 5A football poll 

JOURNAL SPORTS 

Airline finally found its way into the latest LSWA Class 5A football Top-10 poll at No. 9 on Monday.

It took the Vikings four wins into the season and averaging 52.3 points per game in those four wins to get ranked by an LSWA panel of high school beat writers around the state.

Airline’s 60-35 defeat of Benton in the District 1-5A opener for both teams Friday gave it a 4-0 start to the season for the first time since 2019.  The Vikes were 1-3 (1-0 in district) at this point last season.

Undefeated Parkway broke into the list of 5A teams receiving votes after its 24-6 win over Haughton.  

Calvary remained at the top of Class 2A just ahead of St. Charles Catholic. The Cavs had to rely on their defense in a 21-6 defeat of Class 3A’s previously undefeated Wossman.  

Evangel continues to receive votes in Class 4A after its 49-0 whitewashing of Bossier.  

LSWA Prep Football Polls
Class 5A W-L Pts. Prv.
1. John Curtis (9) 3-0 149 1
2. Edna Karr (4) 4-0 143 2
3. Destrehan 4-0 131 3
4. Zachary 3-0 116 4
5. Ruston 4-0 111 5
6. Carencro 4-0 85 6
7. West Monroe 4-0 61 8
8. Acadiana 3-1 59 9
9. Airline 4-0 43 NR
10. East St. John 4-0 35 NR
Others receiving votes: St. Augustine 30, Catholic-BR 27, Brother Martin 9, Southside 8, Dutchtown 4, Sam Houston 3, Holy Cross 3, Parkway 1..
 
Class 4A W-L Pts. Prv.
1. St. Thomas More (13) 4-0 156 1
2. Neville 4-0 136 3
3. Lafayette Christian 3-1 130 2
4. Westgate 4-0 12 4
5. North DeSoto 3-1 88 6
6. Warren Easton 1-3 88 5
7. Lutcher 2-1 73 7
8. West Feliciana 3-1 64 8
9. Teurlings Catholic 3-1 57 9
10. Shaw 2-2 21 NR
Others receiving votes: Cecilia 19, Tioga 17, Evangel Christian 14, Opelousas 9, Franklin Parish 7, Plaquemine 5, Morgan City 1, Vandebilt Catholic 1.
 
Class 3A W-L Pts. Prv.
1. University (10) 3-1 153 1
2. E.D. White (3) 4-0 138 3
3. St. James 3-1 134 2
4. Sterlington 3-1 120 4
5. Jena 4-0 91 6
6. Union Parish 2-2 83 7
7. Parkview Baptist 3-1 80 8
8. Madison Prep 2-2 40 5
9. John F. Kennedy 3-1 47 9
10. St. Louis 3-1 39 10
Others receiving votes: Amite 24, Wossman 11, Iota 10, North Webster 7, Bogalusa 6, Lake Charles Prep 6, Bunkie 4, Carroll 4, Pine 3, South Beauregard 1.
 
Class 2A W-L Pts. Prv.
1. Calvary (9) 4-0 152 1
2. St. Charles (4) 4-0 147 2
3. Newman 4-0 129 3
4. Dunham 3-1 110 5
5. Oak Grove 2-2 101 6
6. Notre Dame 2-2 91 4
7. Episcopal-BR 3-1 69 8
8. Northlake Christian 4-0 52 9
9. Many 2-2 48 7
10. Loreauville 3-1 43 10
Others receiving votes: Catholic-New Iberia 39, Oakdale 26, Ascension Episcopal 3, South Plaquemine 3.
 
Class 1A W-L Pts. Prv.
1. Ouachita Chr. (13) 4-0 157 1
2. Vermilion Catholic 4-0 142 3
3. Southern Lab 2-1 122 4
4. Homer 3-1 108 5
5. Kentwood 3-1 106 2
6. St. Martin’s 3-0 86 6
7. Riverside Acad. 3-1 82 7
8. Haynesville 4-0 77 8
9. St. Mary’s 4-0 52 10
10. Ascension Catholic 3-1 39 9
Others receiving votes: Logansport 31, Glenbrook 9, Jeanerette 6, St. Frederick 6, White Castle 2, Centerville 1.

LSU’s Kelly sees resiliency resurgence

TOUCHDOWN: LSU wide receiver Malik Nabers makes one of his two touchdown catches in last Saturday’s 34-31 win over Arkansas. Nabers ranks first in the SEC in receptions (35) and receptions per game (8) and is second in receiving yards per game (130.75). (Photo by KRISTEN YOUNG, LSU Athletics) 

By RON HIGGINS, Journal Sports

BATON ROUGE – Rewind just more than three weeks ago, and LSU head coach Brian Kelly and his team had a long plane ride home from Orlando after a stunning 45-24 season-opening loss to Florida State.

The most puzzling thing to Kelly was the Seminoles outscored the Tigers 31-7 in the second half. LSU had 15 returning starters – 8 on offense, 7 on defense – from its 2022 SEC West Division championship squad that came back for wins vs. Auburn, Mississippi State and Ole Miss by 17, 13 and 17 points respectively.

With those returning players, why did LSU roll over and play dead in the final two quarters vs. FSU? Where was their fight, their hunger to win?

After two blowout wins over Grambling and Mississippi State, the Tigers had to battle back from a late-second quarter deficit last Saturday in a 34-31 SEC victory over the Arkansas Razorbacks. Kelly liked how his team climbed out of a 10-point hole by scoring in the last 30 seconds of the first half and the first minute of the second half.

“We really didn’t have the right mix of mindset going into the Florida State game, so this (the Arkansas game) was our first chance really to identify who we were when we got down,” Kelly said at his weekly Monday press conference. “We immediately responded. We came out in the second half and played the kind of football that I expect.

“Never flinching, knowing that we were going to take some more shots. And when we gave up a play, we forgot about it. We’re starting to see some resiliency from last year to this year.”

Heading into Saturday’s game between No. 13 LSU and No. 20 Ole Miss in Oxford, Kelly is happy with the Tigers’ offense that leads the SEC in scoring (42.75 points per game) and total offense (530 yards per game).

LSU quarterback Jayden Daniels won the co-SEC Offensive Player of the Week for a second consecutive week, totaling 356 yards including 5 TDs vs. Arkansas. The Tigers had two 100-yard receivers (Malik Nabers 8 catches for 130 yards, 2 TDs and Brian Thomas (5 receptions for 133 yards, 2 TDs). Running back Logan Diggs almost had his second 100-yard rushing game in the last three weeks, running for 97 yards and 14 carries.

There was a lot to like offensively.

Defensively, not so much.

Arkansas gained 426 total offense yards. QB KJ Jefferson totaled 337 yards and 3 TDs passes. His constant escapes from a collapsing pass pocket consistently sent the Tigers’ defense into a tizzy, especially LSU’s defensive backs who ran around like their jerseys were on fire.

One play in the first minute of the fourth quarter – Jefferson’s scrambling 59-yard TD pass off a scramble to wide-open Luke Hasz – illustrated what Kelly believes is the crux of LSU’s defensive woes.

“This is about staying focused all the time and doing your job,” Kelly said. “He (LSU cornerback Zy Alexander) lost sight of what he should have been doing on that particular play.

“He saw the quarterback as a run threat. That’s not his (Alexander) job. His job was to be the deep half-defender. Go do your job. There was somebody else assigned to him. (Jefferson)

“We are trying to chase too many plays on defense. We’re trying to make plays that aren’t really our place to make. We need to do our job. Once we settle down and do the ordinary things extraordinarily well, this can be a really good defense.”

KNOW YOUR ENEMY

LSU (3-1 overall, 2-0 SEC West) at Ole Miss (3-1, 0-1 SEC West), Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, Saturday, 5 p.m. (ESPN)

Last game for Ole Miss: Lost at 24-10 at Alabama last Saturday. After trailing 7-6 at halftime, Alabama was dominant on both sides of the ball in the second half as the Tide racked up 241 total offense yards compared to 148 for Ole Miss.

Series record and last meeting: LSU leads the series 64-41-4. Last season in Tiger Stadium, unbeaten Ole Miss led 17-3 in the second quarter before LSU scored 28 unanswered points in a 45-20 win. Tigers’ quarterback Jayden Daniels completed 21 of 28 passes for 248 yards and 2 TDs and ran for 121 yards and 3 TDs on 23 carries.

Ole Miss head coach: Lane Kiffin (87-48 in 12 seasons, 26-14 in his third season at Ole Miss)

THIS AND THAT

Early betting line: LSU opens as a 2½-point favorite

Number of Louisiana natives on Ole Miss roster: 1

Number of Mississippi natives on LSU roster: 6

Number of transfers on Ole Miss roster from 4-year schools: 40 players from 37 schools including 19 players from 15 Power 5 Conference schools

OLE MISS PLAYERS TO WATCH

QB Jaxson Dart (65 of 103 for 1,096 passing yards, 7 touchdowns, 2 interceptions, 219 rushing yards and 3 TDs on 44 carries), WR Tre Harris (8 catches for 188 yards, 5 TDs), WR Jordan Watkins (24 catches for 347 yards, 1 TD), RB Quinshon Judkins (201 rushing yards and 4 TDs on 57 carries)

FS Trey Washington (25 tackles, 2 TFL), MLB Khari Coleman (19 tackles, 2½ TFL, 1½ sacks), SS John Saunders Jr. (18 tackles, 1 sack, 4 PBU), PK Caden Davis (7 for 9 FG, 16 of 16 extra points), P Fraser Masin (43.1 ypk, 3 fair catches, 3 inside the 20, 1 plus 50 yards), KO Caden Davis (31 KO for 63.4 average, 23 touchbacks, 1 out of bounds), KR Ulysses Bentley IV (6 for 113 yards), PR Jordan Watkins (4 for 72 yards, 1 TD)

HIS-TO-RY QUIZ

1. The last time Ole Miss clinched an SEC championship. . .

    A. Current head coach Lane Kiffin wasn’t yet born

    B. The Beatles hadn’t made their first U.S. appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show

    C. Was eight days after the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy

    D. All of the above

2. What is the highest finish for an Ole Miss player in Heisman Trophy voting?

    A. 3rd

    B. 2nd

    C. 1st

    D. 4th

3. Who was the former Ole Miss quarterback from the New Orleans area first to see game action in a Super Bowl?

     A. John Fourcade

     B. Eli Manning

     C. Norris Weese

     D. Pee Wee Reese

ANSWERS: 1. D, 2. A, 3. C

Contact Ron at ronhigginsmedia@gmail.com


Battle of ranked teams at Calvary highlights mid-season slate

DEFENSE DIDN’T REST:  Calvary Baptist got a big night from its defense, including Landon Sylvie (19), to offset a slow offensive outing and subdue a strong Wossman team 21-6 last Friday. The Cavs face a tough test this Friday when state-ranked Westgate visits. (Journal photo by GAVEN HAMMOND)

JOURNAL STAFF  

Calvary’s rugged pre-district schedule comes to a close as the Class 2A No. 1 ranked Cavaliers host New Iberia’s Westgate, Class 4A’s No. 4 ranked team, in a battle of unbeatens that highlights the midway point of the local prep football season.   

The game is scheduled for Friday night at Jerry Barker Stadium.   

Thursday’s lone game to begin Week 5 is a District 1-5A matchup of Benton (1-3, 0-1) who has lost its last three after a season-opening win and Byrd (0-4, 0-1) who is still looking for its first win.  

Friday’s slate has a pair of 1-5A games that matches four teams that won their district openers. Undefeated Parkway (4-0, 1-0) will face Captain Shreve (3-1, 1-0) at Independence Stadium and Airline (4-0, 1-0) travels to Natchitoches Central (2-2, 1-0) at Turpin Stadium. Southwood (0-4, 0-1) will host Haughton (2-2, 0-1) at Booker T. Washington’s Leonard C. Barnes Stadium. 

The Airline at NCHS game shifted from Thursday to Friday several weeks ago when a St. Mary’s home game against Newman of New Orleans was called off. The Newman School administration didn’t want to make two trips to north Louisiana. The Greenies came to Benton earlier this month.   

District 1-4A will have a pair of 1-0 teams facing each other when Woodlawn (3-1) plays at Evangel (2-2). Bossier (1-3, 0-1) is at Northwood (1-3, 1-0), Huntington (2-2, 0-1) at Minden (0-4, 0-1) and BTW (1-3, 0-1) at North DeSoto (3-1, 1-0).   

Non-district matchups have North Caddo (1-3) hosting undefeated 5A West Ouachita (4-0), Green Oaks (1-3) traveling to Alexandria for the second consecutive week, this time to play ASH (2-2), and Mansfield (0-4) coming to Shreveport to face Magnolia Charter (0-4).    

Loyola is idle this week. 

Thursday’s game  

District 1-5A  

Benton (1-3, 0-1) vs. Byrd (0-4, 0-1), Independence Stadium  

Friday’s games  

District 1-5A  

Parkway (4-0, 1-0) vs. Captain Shreve (3-1, 1-0), Independence Stadium  

Haughton (2-2, 0-1) vs. Southwood (0-4, 0-1), Leonard C. Barnes Stadium  

Airline (4-0, 1-0) at Natchitoches Central (2-2, 1-0), Turpin Stadium  

District 1-4A  

Woodlawn (3-1, 1-0) at Evangel (2-2, 1-0), Rodney Duron Stadium  

Bossier (1-3, 0-1) at Northwood (1-3, 1-0), Jerry Burton Stadium  

Huntington (2-2, 0-1) at Minden (0-4, 0-1)  

BTW (1-3, 0-1) at North DeSoto (3-1, 1-0)  

District 1-1A  

Plain Dealing (0-4, 0-1) at Haynesville (4-0, 1-0)  

NON-DISTRICT  

Westgate (4-0) at Calvary (4-0), Jerry Barker Stadium  

West Ouachita (4-0) at North Caddo (1-3), Sanders-Prudhomme Stadium  

Green Oaks (1-3) at Alexandria (2-2)  

Mansfield (0-4) at Magnolia Charter (0-4)  

Loyola is open


Trip of a lifetime with my old team

It’s been 28 years since I have traveled with the Louisiana Tech football team. In November of 1995, I went to Nashville, Tennessee with the Bulldogs as their right tackle. We had a forgettable date, 29-6, with the Vanderbilt Commodores.

Last Friday, as the sideline reporter for the LA Tech Football Radio Network, I traveled with the team to Lincoln as the Bulldogs faced Nebraska on Saturday.

In some ways it seems like a hundred years ago since I’d traveled with the team. In other ways it seems like it was yesterday.

Something about packing in the old Tech charter bus with my brothers and heading east on I-20 to the airport in Monroe. Going to battle!

In my day, the bus would pull up on the tarmac – about 40 yards from the plane – and “the race” would be on.

The race was between the taller offensive linemen who coveted those seats on the wing with the extra leg room. The defensive linemen were not in play. They didn’t have a chance. They were on Bus No. 2.

Back then, the last people to get on the plane would be the administrators, coaches and wives, and supporters.

The late Dr. Guthrie Jarrell was always with us on those trips. Always. He sat in first class where – being a tall man himself – I’m sure he appreciated the extra leg room, too.

“It must be nice.” If I didn’t say it back then, I thought it. It must be nice to be able to take in a college football game and root, root, root, for ol’ red and blue. It must be nice to not have to worry about your blocking assignments and taking the proper first step before trying to knock the block off a guy who is a 6-3, 245-pound, five-star SEC defensive end who runs like a deer.

Don’t get me wrong.

There is nothing like the rush of trotting out on the field in some of the sport’s biggest and best venues in front of thousands of people and playing the greatest game God ever created. Williams-Bryce. Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama. Been there. In the trenches. Hand-to-shoulder pad combat. Hat on a hat. At the bottom of the pile. There is nothing like it.

Even back then, I said I always wanted to take a trip with the team and experience it…without the pressure. Thanks to Learfield and the Tech administration, I was able to do that last Friday.

The trips are a little different now. There were no security checks back then. Now, you get your snacks before getting on the plane. Assigned seats. A little thank you note from Tech head coach Sonny Cumbie.

It was nice…even with knees jammed into the back of an airplane seat and praying to God a sixth grader sitting in front of me doesn’t want to see how far his seat back can go.

The University of Nebraska is known for storied tradition, 100-year old Memorial Stadium, the fumblerooski, and their loyal fan base. Among other things. 391 consecutive sellouts! Are you kidding me, Cornhuskers? Wow.

When the Louisiana Tech entourage arrived in Lincoln, everyone went straight to the stadium and walked out on Tom Osborne Field. Red signs reading “There is no place like Nebraska” were lit up all over the stadium.

Back in the day, we would get in our shorts and T-shirts and have a walk-through practice after arriving Friday. The walk-through for the Bulldogs on this trip happened in the parking lot of the Marriott in Omaha, Nebraska early Saturday morning.

Impressive was the adjective for when Memorial Stadium was empty. Incredible would be the word for Saturday at 2:30 p.m. when Big Red took the field against my Bulldogs with 85,000 Cornhusker fans in the stands.

When the announcer says “and that will bring up THIRRRRRDDD DOOOOWWWNNNNN!!!,” most in the sea of red stand on their feet and scream their heads off. On third down, I’ve never heard a louder stadium…ever.

The score was 7-7 at halftime and I could not have been more proud of how the Bulldogs competed.

Things got away from Tech as the second half started. The big offensive line from Nebraska, with the smallest lineman being 6-3, 315, leaned on the Tech defense. Pulling the left guard and running off tackle to the right side all the way down the field.

Penalties. Personal fouls. And one flag – a pass interference call – which was thrown and then picked up, hurt the Bulldogs. A good fight, but 28-14 was the final.

While the outcome was not what Louisiana Tech wanted, it was a memorable time – at least for this old Dawg, able to take the trip of a lifetime with the Louisiana Tech football team.

Contact Jerry at sbjjerrybyrd@gmail.com


Ponderings

By Doug De Graffenried

Did you ever have one of those moments?

The other evening, I decided that supper would include steaks. I did the early morning preparation for the late afternoon cooking ritual. Those steaks were well prepped.

The other part of the steak ritual involves the grill. I have one of the wood pellet grills. It is spiffy. My cooking has improved. Once upon a time, hamburgers that I grilled were not palatable and later used as official hockey pucks. I’m much better now. The wood pellet grill needs several minutes to warm up to steak temperature. It gets very hot but helps me avoid hockey puck cooking accidents.

The cover came off. I checked the inside of the grill. Verified the nice little drip bucket would have adequate room for drippings. The wood pellets were checked and determined to be adequate. 

I reached around back to turn the grill on. Nothing! The switch glows orange when the grill is on. This switch was dark. I checked the plug, after all I had wired it with my redneck electrician method of designing an outdoor circuit. The GCFI plug was tested and verified to be working. It has a nice green light showing it’s functioning.

Never trusting the one outlet, I grabbed an extension cord and plugged everything into the other GCFI outdoor outlet. Nothing! Tried a couple of other outlets inside the shed. Nothing!

In my rapidly filling up mind, I decided the switch had gone bad. The steaks were begging to be cooked, so I reverted to the broiler inside. The steaks were marvelous. I was a little bummed about the grill though. It is not that old.

After the sumptuous steak supper, I grabbed the manual that came with the grill and turned to the troubleshooting chapter. Nothing! The switch would not light up. The grill would not come on, although clearly my redneck circuits were supplying power to the outlets.

I resolved to call and check the warranty. I walked back outside to put the cover on the grill and roll up the extension cord. That’s when I learned that I’m a dumb donkey. OK, I’m the other thing, but I can’t use that language in this family friendly publication.

The cord for the grill not only plugs into the wall, but it also plugs into the grill. The end of the cord plugged into the grill had worked its way loose. When I unplugged the grill cord from the extension cord, the other end fell to the ground.

I had to confess my stupidity. I resolved to check that end of the cord each time. But here’s the deal, I should have thought of it. Who would have thought that the other end of a power cord could come loose from where it plugged into the grill? The answer is, just about everyone!

In a conversation last week, a person said, “I don’t feel like I’m connecting with God very well these days.” I know who is unplugged. When God seems distant, you need to check both ends of the spiritual connection. If you don’t know about the two directions of a spiritual connection, come see me on Sunday, I’ll explain it to you. We might have steak!


Notice of Death – September 25, 2023

Wanda Bernice Busey
July 18, 1931 — September 19, 2023
Service: Tuesday, September 26, 2023, 10 am at Rose Neath Funeral Home, Southside.

Drucilla Maeda Bolin
February 14, 1926 — September 21, 2023
Service: Tuesday, September 26, 2023, 11 am at Rose Neath Funeral Home, Bossier City.

John Whitfield Free
August 15, 1942 – September 23, 2023
Service: Wednesday, September 27, 2023, Noon at Forest Park West Cemetery, Shreveport.

Mary O. Long
January 30, 1931 – September 17, 2023
Service: Tuesday, October 3, 2023, 10 am at the Cathedral of St. John Berchman.

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com)

SBJ’s Weekly Restaurant Review: BeauxJax Crafthouse

BeauxJax Crafthouse

Each week, the Shreveport-Bossier Journal’s always hungry reporter visits a different restaurant and tells you about the experience.

By ANON E. MUSS, Journal Services

It was lunchtime, and we didn’t have much time.

My friend and I were in Bossier City on a recent Tuesday, so we decided to visit BeauxJax Crafthouse (501 Barksdale Boulevard), in the East Bank District.

I had been there once — maybe twice — but it was at least two years ago. My friend had been there maybe a time or two more. But neither of us have the best memory, so we treated this trip as if it were our first trip.

If you go to BeauxJax, be prepared to park and walk. A little after Noon, street parking near the restaurant was full. We parked in a concrete-surface lot behind and a couple of streets over from BeauxJax. The walk wasn’t bad, even in 90-degree heat.

You never get a second chance to make a first impression, and BeauxJax made a good first impression. We walked in the door at 12:15, and before it was 12:16, we had been greeted and seated. That, despite only two available tables in an almost-full restaurant, counting bar seating. There is covered patio seating, of which several people took advantage. However, as I mentioned, it was 90 degrees.

Within another minute, our server — Ozzy — was standing at our table, introducing himself, and asking for our drink order.

Looking around, we couldn’t help but like BeauxJax’s atmosphere. My friend said it reminded her of New Orleans, and I agree. She said the red brick-exposed walls were the building’s original walls. We looked up and saw wooden ceiling beams and exposed air condition ductwork.

There were seven televisions throughout the restaurant, with most of them over the bar. It looked like no matter where you sit, you would have a view of a game or whatever was on (in this case, U.S. Open tennis.) The crowd was a mix of businesspeople, workers, and medical staff/students. The noise wasn’t so loud that my friend and I couldn’t have a conversation.

Seven minutes after we sat down, Ozzy was back to take our order. BeauxJax’s menu isn’t overwhelming, but the focus is on Sharables (think appetizers), Salads, and Po-Boys. Because I am also thinking of you, the reader, I insisted we start one of those sharables — the Jumbo Shrimp Cocktail ($10.99). The menu said the appetizer would consist of eight jumbo shrimp with cocktail sauce. I was surprised when it arrived, as I have always seen a shrimp cocktail served in some type of glass. However, this shrimp cocktail came in a non-glass serving bowl. The shrimp were seasoned, and very tasty. However, BeauxJax’s use of the word “Jumbo” was a bit of a stretch.

For my entrée, I chose the Half Po-boy & Salad ($11.99). I went with the Gator Andouille, and a Mixed Green salad (I could have chosen a Traditional Caesar Salad.) The menu described the po-boy as made up of gator sausage, slaw, and house sauce. It had been a while since I had a po-boy, mostly because I don’t eat much bread. You know when you order a po-boy, there is going to be a lot more bread than what’s on the inside. This po-boy wasn’t any different. The bread — Gambino’s French Bread — looked to have a little melted butter. It was good — not too tough, not too soft. My only complaint with the po-boy is that the eight pieces of gator sausage were not hot. While they weren’t cold, they weren’t warm, either.

I would say they were room temperature. The sausage needed to be hot because they were on top of the slaw—which was cold. I didn’t need the only two things inside the bread to be cold.

Now, let me tell you about the house sauce. It was delicious! Ozzy said it’s a mix of Pepper Jelly and Cole Slaw. It had a bit of a kick, and I found myself taking pieces of sausage which had fallen out of the po-boy and dipping them in the sauce.

The salad was fine — nothing special. It was a nice portion of lettuce, tomato, cucumbers, and sliced onions. I ordered the house dressing which turned out to be the house sauce! It was so good, I was happy to have it twice.

My friend chose the Bourbon Chicken Caesar Salad ($13.99). It came with lots of Bourbon Street Chicken, romaine lettuce, parmesan cheese, croutons, and Caesar dressing. It was big enough that she couldn’t eat it all, leaving much of the lettuce and none of the chicken. My friend said the chicken had good flavor and a bit of a kick, although I took a bite and found the chicken to be a bit dry. She said the Caesar dressing — which can be too tangy at some places — was good and creamy.

For dessert, we had three choices: Banana Foster Cheesecake, King Cake Cheesecake, or Bread Pudding. I don’t like bananas, so we were down to two. Given the responsibility of selecting, I went with the King Cake Cheesecake ($7.49).

When served, it certainly looked the part. The top layer resembled a dark, rich king cake. The bottom layer looked like cheesecake. The top had Mardi Gras-color icing, and a small swirl of whipped cream in the shape of a nice design.

Unfortunately, my friend and I agreed we should have chosen something else. The King Cake Cheesecake wasn’t bad — and it was good enough that we ate it all — it just didn’t stand out. I thought it had a bit of a pumpkin spice taste but was otherwise bland. My friend said she tasted sea salt. We concluded that next time, we will make a different selection.

Yes, there will be a next time. More on that shortly.

Along with our check, Ozzy brought my friend an unsolicited Diet Coke in a to-go cup. That was a nice gesture, although on the check, we were charged for two drinks when we only had one (I had water). I brought it to Ozzy’s attention, and he quickly agreed that was a mistake, and would take care of it. When he returned with my credit card and receipt, there was only one drink ($3.49) listed.

The total for our lunch, excluding tax and tip, was $49.38. One thing I really liked is that the original customer’s copy of the receipt listed suggested tip amounts based on different percentages. Those percentages were based on the subtotal—not including tax. That’s how I think it should be done, but always isn’t. My copy of the final receipt was itemized and included my tip. (The accounting folks at the SBJ appreciate that as well when they receive my expense report.)

We were up from our two-seat, high-top, wooden table at 1:17 — an hour and two minutes after we arrived. It was a very efficient dining experience — not a lot of wasted time. And when you don’t have much time, that’s what you want.

After a brief discussion, my friend and I decided we would return to BeauxJax Crafthouse and go out of our way to do so. However, we would order something different. My main reason in giving BeauxJax Four Forks is not so much for the food, but for the really pleasing atmosphere and terrific service. To me, those count for a lot. So much, that BeauxJax will have a repeat customer.

Is there a restaurant you would like the Journal to review? Email: SBJRestaurantReview@gmail.com

Forks Four

1 Fork: Would rather eat a box of dirt
2 Forks: Will return, but only if someone else is buying
3 Forks: Will return and look forward to it
4 Forks: Will return and go out of my way to do so


Calling all artists: Boom or Bust Byway artistic gateway signs

The Shreveport Regional Arts Council (SRAC), in collaboration with the Shreveport-Bossier Convention and Tourist Bureau, announces an open artist “call” for designs for the gateway signs to adorn the iconic Boom or Bust Byway. The Boom or Bust Byway runs from Mooringsport and Hosston North to Hwy. 2 and East/West from Vivian to Lake Claiborne/Homer. The Boom or Bust Byway is selected as an All-American Byway…the highest designation for a scenic byway.

Inspired by the “THUNDER BAY” Gateway Signs that welcome visitors to Thunder Bay, Canada, these laser-cut metal signs are unique in that they showcase the natural beauty of the region’s backdrop – meadows, woodlands, forests, and field of sunflowers will be seen through the laser-cut metal.  The gateway signs will pay tribute to the cultural heritage of eight towns along the Boom or Bust Byway through Northwest Louisiana.  Each will provide an opportunity for “selfie stops” and a QR Code will direct byway travelers to the unique shops, restaurants, and destinations in the eight towns.  

The Boom or Bust Byway Gateway Signs provide an opportunity for Northwest Louisiana artists to showcase their creativity by combining the selected key activities that make each community unique with a distinctive visual narrative. These icons, selected by each community, will mirror their unique history, culture, and allure. The selected artists will channel their vision into symbols that best resonate with the community they represent.  The artists will be responsible to submit to-scale designs, which will be professionally fabricated under the direction of Project Manager, Bruce Allen.

Objectives of the artists’ designed gateway signs:

Encouragement: Enthuse travelers to embark on the mesmerizing journey of the BOOM OR BUST Byway, a scenic route that weaves through the landscape of Northwest Louisiana.

Exploration: Inspire travelers to explore the hidden gems nestled in each Town and Village along the Byway – an opportunity to encounter the authentic Louisiana experience off the conventional route.

Inspiration: Spur travelers to halt for a picturesque “Selfie,” share their experiences on social media platforms, and scan a QR code for access to the region’s history, as well as directions to local shopping, dining, and attractions.

The submission process is open to Artists who have self-identified and registered on the Northwest Louisiana Culturalyst Directory at the time of submission. Artists residing or owning property in Northwest Louisiana and possessing a portfolio of at least 10 works of art, along with a professional resume and an Artist’s statement, can register on the CULTURALYST directory at no cost.

Design entries will be accepted via Submittable.com through the following links:

https://nwla.culturalyst.com

https://srac.submittable.com

Important dates:

Submission deadline: 4:00 p.m., Thursday, September 28

Scope and background:

Up to 11 artistic gateway signs will be erected along the 163-mile Boom or Bust Byway, showcasing the vibrant communities of Gilliam, Oil City, Plain Dealing, Vivian, Belcher, Hosston, Red River Bridge, Sarepta, Homer, and Lake Claiborne.

For reference, examples of Thunder Bay Gateway Signs, fabrication, and installation can be found on Submittable Culturalyst. The role of the Artist is to design the sign; not fabricate, construct, or install the sign.

This artist call presents a golden opportunity for artists to become an integral part of Northwest Louisiana’s rich cultural narrative. Join us in this endeavor to illuminate the Boom or Bust Byway with creativity and inspiration.


Airline alone atop latest SBJ prep football poll

JOURNAL SPORTS

Airline regained solo possession of the No. 1 spot in the Shreveport-Bossier Journal Top 10 prep football poll after the fourth week of games.

The Vikings remained undefeated and started their District 1-5A title defense with a convincing 60-35 romp over last year’s district runner-up Benton. They got all six first-place votes.

Airline is primed to break into the Louisiana Sports Writers Association Class 5A Top 10 Monday since No. 10 St. Augustine lost, and the Vikings topped the “others receiving votes” in last week’s balloting.

Calvary dropped from being tied at the top spot into the No. 2 position after facing offensive struggles for the first time in 2023. The Cavs, No. 1 in the LSWA’s Class 2A Top 10 last week, were still impressive, relying on their defense to stay perfect and defeat previously undefeated Class 3A Wossman 21-6.

Parkway’s defense pitched its third shutout of the season in a 24-6 defeat of Haughton and move to 4-0 overall and 1-0 in 1-5A. The Bucs’ only score came on an 87-yard fumble return. 

Evangel moves up a notch to No. 4 after a 49-0 defeat of Bossier in its 1-4A opener. Evangel’s rise was surely the reason Captain Shreve dropped a spot to No. 5 after its 35-28 comeback win over rival Byrd. 

Haughton – which played without quarterback Christian Turner — remained at No. 6 despite its defeat at the hands of No. 3 Parkway. Woodlawn moved up to No. 7 after opening its 1-4A slate with a 26-8 win over BTW. 

Huntington slipped a spot to No. 8 after dropping its 1-4A opener to Northwood 27-12. Benton is at No. 9 after its loss to Airline and Northwood climbed back into the top 10 after defeating Huntington.

SBJ Top 10
School (1st) W-L Pts. Prev.
1. Airline (6) 4-0 60 1
2. Calvary 4-0 53 2
3. Parkway 4-0 49 3
4. Evangel 2-2 41 5
5. Captain Shreve 3-1 37 4
6. Haughton 2-2 29 6
7. Woodlawn 3-1 23 T8
8. Huntington 2-2 16 7
9. Benton 1-3 14 T8
10. Northwood 1-3 12 NR
Receiving votes: none.    

High school sports aren’t just about the highlights

Insider tip: this week’s Shreveport-Bossier Journal Coaches Roundtable question being pondered by local head football coaches is one they’re enjoying.

“What’s your favorite memory from your football playing career?” Read replies Wednesday.

For today’s local players, it’s easy to suggest a few answers.

  • The senior class at Captain Shreve may not top the end of last Thursday’ 35-28 triumph over arch-rival Byrd. The Gators scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter, sandwiched around a fourth-and-2 stop of the Yellow Jackets with 5:04 left, down by 1. It was Shreve’s first win in the Backyard Brawl since 2019.
  • Captain Shreve’s Jamarlon “Bobo” Otis raced 66 yards for the game-winning touchdown one snap after that fourth-down stuff. In the huddle, when Otis heard the “21 Cut” play call, he told Gators’ quarterback Brodie Savage it was going to be a TD. Hey, Bobo, got any ideas about the winning Powerball numbers tonight?
  • Across the Red River, on the same night, Airline QB Ben Taylor tossed seven touchdown passes – in the first half. Even in the recent hyper-charged scoring locally, seven TD throws in a game is amazing. To do that before halftime, against an opponent of Benton’s caliber, is stupendous.
  • Coleman Pratt made an extra point for Haughton in the Bucs’ Sept. 8 win at LaGrange. So what, you’d say, if you hadn’t read John James Marshall’s wonderful “Pratt makes a point, turns Bucs’ win into a bigger deal” story on Sept. 13. If you haven’t, use the search button at the upper left of this page. Pratt has defied the odds and consistently refuses to accept he can’t do something because he’s extra short.

Those are just a few recent examples. One of the joys of high school sports is the ever-present opportunity for young people to be part of achievements that create lasting memories in their lives, and for others. Big victories, and smaller ones. Those on a scoreboard, and those among teammates.

But as much as you wish it was all hugs and high-fives, it’s not.

None of those feats above were conjured up. They resulted from hours, days, months and years of practice, summer workouts, strength and conditioning sessions, and often plenty of time studying game tape, and always, responding to coaching.

One of the most overused phrases in sports: “people don’t know.” In plenty of cases, we do. But it is hard for outsiders to fully appreciate the commitment level, the toughness, the work ethic, the sacrifices, and the ability to learn and improve required not only to produce timeless memories and highlight reel plays, but simply, to go compete game after game, win or lose.

It’s challenging to stick with it when a coach is pushing you harder than you like. To stay the course when the scoreboard sucks. Especially when it sucks game after game.

Respect players, coaches, trainers and managers who keep pushing forward for teams where winning is elusive. Respect kids who aren’t getting to play much, if at all. Or those playing in a role they don’t necessarily like.

The easiest thing is to quit. Some do. They walk away from the work they’ve put in, give up on the experiences they could have. Most often – there can be exceptions – it’s a selfish act to give up, and doing so can open the door to much more dire consequences down the road.

“At some point you’re going to have some adversity, and you have to handle it, you have to conquer it. That’s a life lesson.”  Those were words earlier last week from Captain Shreve coach Adam Kirby, reflecting on how the Gators reacted to a 61-27 walloping by Calvary Baptist a couple weeks earlier.

Those are words that many coaches, in every sport, have shared with their teams and players, for as long as balls have been placed on tees, nets have been strung up on rims, bats have been swung, stopwatches and tape measures have been used, and ankles have been taped.

They should be heeded much more often today than ever. Things go wrong. Decisions, seemingly unfair, get made. Strong words from authority figures are spoken – a.k.a. “real talk.” Pride and ego take a beating. Feelings get hurt.

It’s at least uncomfortable, tough to take. Instead of quitting, it’s infinitely more impressive to face it head on, to listen and learn, to hang in there.

Here’s another well-used coaches’ line: “if I’m on you, it’s because I know you can do better.”

That’s a coach’s job. Not only to make his guys better players, but to help teenagers to keep pushing through struggles, working to succeed.

Those are the victories that matter most. 

Contact Doug at sbjdoug@gmail.com


Local high school football standings

 NICE KNIGHT:  Multi-talented Brandon Henderson Jr. (3) has been a key part of Woodlawn’s 3-1 start. (Journal photo by KEVIN SHANNAHAN)

District competition is underway in 1-5A, 1-4A and 1-1A for local teams.

Football standings
DISTRICT 1-5A Dist. All
Airline 1-0 4-0
Parkway 1-0 4-0
Captain Shreve 1-0 3-1
Natchitoches Central 1-0 2-2
Haughton 0-1 2-2
Benton 0-1 1-3
Byrd 0-1 0-4
Southwood 0-1 0-4
 
DISTRICT 1-4A Dist. All
North DeSoto 1-0 3-1
Woodlawn 1-0 3-1
Evangel 1-0 2-2
Northwood 1-0 1-3
BTW 0-1 2-2
Huntington 0-1 2-2
Bossier 0-1 1-3
Minden 0-1 0-4
 
DISTRICT 1-2A Dist. All
Calvary 0-0 4-0
D’Arbonne Woods 0-0 4-0
Lakeside 0-0 3-1
Green Oaks 0-0 1-3
Loyola 0-0 1-3
North Caddo 0-0 1-3
 
DISTRICT 1-1A Dist. All
Haynesville 1-0 4-0
Homer 1-0 3-1
Ringgold 1-0 3-1
Arcadia 0-0 4-0
Glenbrook 0-1 3-1
Magnolia Charter 0-1 0-4
Plain Dealing 0-4 0-4

Stay in Shreveport was springboard for Jim Hawthorne’s LSU career

By MASON SIEGEL, LSU Athletics Communications

There’s something about the true power of a voice.  For generations of LSU fans, there is no more iconic, more golden voice than Jim Hawthorne’s.

Last Friday night, Hawthorne was awarded the LSU Athletics Hall of Fame Distinguished Honor.

Known as “The Voice of the Tigers,” from 1979-2016, Hawthorne served as the radio play-by-play announcer for LSU football, baseball and men’s basketball. 

Born in Many, Hawthorne moved just south to Anacoco, in the sixth grade. He began his career at radio station KLLA as a senior in high school, serving as the play-by-play announcer for the Leesville High School Wampus Cats football team.

After graduating from high school, Hawthorne worked as a commercial radio broadcaster and DJ for KNOC in Natchitoches, while attending college at Northwestern State.

There, he befriended one of his greatest mentors, the late Norm Fletcher. Fletcher served as a play-by-play announcer for Northwestern State sports for four decades after working as a broadcaster in the U.S. military’s Far East Network during the Korean Conflict.

“I loved him, he was like a big brother to me,” Hawthorne said. “If it weren’t for him, I don’t know what I would’ve done.”

With Fletcher as his guide, Hawthorne began calling his first collegiate games, serving as play-by-play announcer for NSU men’s basketball. Hawthorne then moved to Shreveport, where he worked at KWKH, one of the nation’s top 50,000-watt stations, known through much of the country as a home to LSU football as well as for a popular country music program known as the Louisiana Hayride.

While at KWKH, Hawthorne was the play-by-play announcer for Centenary College men’s basketball. He had the opportunity to call games involving future four-time NBA champion center Robert “The Chief” Parish. Hawthorne also handled Texas League baseball games and World Football League contests.

With Hawthorne still living in Shreveport and working for KWKH, the voice of LSU football, John Ferguson, visited KWKH in search of a radio announcer for LSU men’s basketball. It was there that Ferguson requested an audition tape from Hawthorne. A few weeks later, Ferguson returned to Shreveport, where the two met for lunch.

While at lunch, Hawthorne asked Ferguson if the position for LSU basketball had been filled.

“Well, that depends,” said Ferguson. 

“What does it depend on?” asked Hawthorne.

“It depends on if you’ll take the job or not,” responded Ferguson.

Hawthorne accepted the job, and his tenure as a Tiger had begun.

He began calling LSU men’s basketball games during the 1979-80 season. He went on to broadcast three NCAA Final Four appearances (1981, 1986, 2006), seven SEC regular-season championships and one SEC Tournament title.

Hawthorne covered some of college basketball’s most electrifying players, highlighted by NBA greats Shaquille O’Neal, Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, and a host of others. Hawthorne was also the voice behind the winningest head coach in program history, Dale Brown.

Hawthorne’s success early success with men’s basketball led him to Tiger Stadium, where he worked alongside Ferguson for a short time before becoming the voice of LSU football. From 1983 to 2015, Hawthorne covered LSU’s 22 bowl games, six SEC titles and two national championships (2003, 2007).

Some of Hawthorne’s most famous calls on the football field include the “Earthquake Game” on October 8, 1988, in which the Tiger Stadium crowd’s reaction to LSU’s game-winning touchdown pass against Auburn registered on a seismograph on campus.

In 1984, Hawthorne – who played some college baseball at Northwestern State — became the first play-by-play announcer in the history of LSU baseball. With the arrival of coach Skip Bertman in the same year, LSU baseball rapidly transformed into a national power.

“To see it start as something that people came to because they didn’t have anything else to do,” Hawthorne remembered, “and seeing it develop into the incredible powerhouse that the baseball program became under Skip Bertman was just incredible.

“I’m very blessed to have had the opportunity to work with him and for him. I don’t know if my career would’ve ended up the way it did had it not been for him.”

Hawthorne was the voice behind LSU’s first 17 College World Series appearances, six national titles and 11 SEC Tournament championships.

Of all the iconic calls over Hawthorne’s legendary career, no moment quite compares to the Warren Morris walk-off home run in the 1996 CWS finale to capture LSU’s third national title.

“That’s probably the most incredible feeling that I’ve ever had,” Hawthorne said as he recalled the moment. “I don’t know if there will ever be anything quite like it again. I’m just very proud to have been part of it.”

Hawthorne proved himself as one of the all-time greats in the industry. In 2011, he was the recipient of the Lindsey Nelson Award, an honor given to an individual who has exemplified a passion for broadcasting during his or her career.

In 2015, Hawthorne was presented with the Chris Schenkel Award in New York City. The award honors those who have lengthy, illustrious careers as college football broadcasters with ties to a particular university.

Hawthorne’s basketball accomplishments were recognized by the Louisiana Association of Basketball Coaches with their Mr. Basketball Award, and on June 25, 2016, he was inducted into the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame in Natchitoches.

Hawthorne credits his mother, as well as Norm Fletcher, for being integral parts of his success.

“Those two really laid the foundation for me to have had the career that I did,” he said.

The LSU Athletics Hall of Fame Distinguished Honor is icing on the cake.

“I’m very humbled by it,” he said. “It’s an incredible award with incredible recognition, and I’d always hoped I’d be worthy of it.”


Notice of Death – September 24, 2023

Josephine Savell
July 29, 1923 — September 20, 2023
Service: Monday, September 25, 2023, 11 am at St. Paul Catholic Church, Minden.

Wanda Bernice Busey
July 18, 1931 — September 19, 2023
Service: Tuesday, September 26, 2023, 10 am at Rose Neath Funeral Home, Southside.

Drucilla Maeda Bolin
February 14, 1926 — September 21, 2023
Service: Tuesday, September 26, 2023, 11 am at Rose Neath Funeral Home, Bossier City.

Mary O. Long
January 30, 1931 – September 17, 2023
Service: Tuesday, October 3, 2023, 10 am at the Cathedral of St. John Berchman.

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com)

After QBs put on a clinic, Tigers outlast Razorbacks

NO DOUBTING THOMAS:  Brian Thomas Jr. caught a pair of 49-yard TD passes for LSU in the Tigers’ dramatic win over Arkansas Saturday night. (Photo courtesy of LSU Athletics)

By RON HIGGINS, Journal Sports

BATON ROUGE – There are so many facts and figures and numbers that tell the story of how the Battle of the Golden Boot went down to the wire here Saturday night.

But here’s the one – neither 12th-ranked LSU or feisty underdog Arkansas had to punt in the final 43½ of 60 minutes.

Dual-threat quarterbacks Jayden Daniels of LSU and KJ Jefferson of Arkansas combined for 693 yards and 7 TDs in a tit-for-tat shootout decided by a 186-pound placekicker who drilled the first game-winner  of his life.

Parked on the doorstep of the Razorbacks’ goal line after a near-perfectly timed 72-yard drive, Damian Ramos calmly made a 20-yard field goal with five seconds left for a 34-31 victory.

“I was ready for it,” said Ramos, who kicked just a handful of field goals in his last two seasons in 2019 and 2020 at St. Paul’s High in Baltimore. “I hit a couple balls in the net. I continued my mental routine. I use a lot of visualization. I already saw it go through (the uprights) before I even kicked it.”

Even then, the Tiger Stadium crowd of 99,648 didn’t exhale until LSU cornerback Zy Alexander intercepted Jefferson’s last-gasp Hail Mary heave at the LSU 19 as time expired. It was the fourth straight season the LSU-Arkansas rivalry was decided by a field goal. The Tigers have won three of those nailbiters, but the 16-13 2021 loss to the Hogs in overtime was the last time LSU lost to an unranked team in Tiger Stadium.

The Hogs entered Saturday’s game – the first time the Tigers-Hogs battle royal had been contested in September – unranked and as a 17½ -point underdog. But LSU head coach Brian Kelly, whose team improved to 3-1 overall and 2-0 in the SEC West, wasn’t buying that.

“We told our team that they (Arkansas) were going to play their very best, and I thought they played their very best,” Kelly said. “It’s one of those games where we were the last ones to have the football. These are the games you have to find a way to win.”

Offensively after LSU punted twice and Daniels threw an interception on the Tigers’ first three possessions, LSU scored on its final six series – a 24-yard field goal, four Daniels TD passes with two each to wide receivers Malik Nabers and Brian Thomas Jr., and finally Ramos’ game-winner.

Daniels, who completed 20 of 29 passes for 320 yards and those four scoring strikes and had 36 yards rushing on 10 carries, said he overcame his slow start by being true to himself.

“Just keep being me,” Daniels explained how he suddenly found his rhythm ending the first half and opening the second half with a pair of 49-yard TD bombs to Thomas. “Everybody believes in me, the coaching staff and the entire team. So, they knew I was going to come around.”

So did Arkansas head coach Sam Pittman.

“Jayden Daniels played a great game,” Pittman said. “Once he was on, he was on. I thought both he and KJ got better as the game went on. Both got in rhythm and were hard to stop.”

The scoreboard and the stats didn’t lie. Arkansas led 13-10 at halftime, fell behind 17-13, cut the lead to 17-16, got down 24-16, tied the game 24-24, and trailed 31-24 before tying it at 31-31 on Jefferson’s 11-yard TD pass to Luke Hasz.

Though LSU outgained Arkansas 509-426 in total yardage, the Razorbacks held a 34:22 to 25:38 advantage in time of possession.

The Hogs’ scoring drives were methodical and physical, highlighted by the 6-3, 252-pound Jefferson completing 21 of 31 for 289 yards with 3 TDs and 2 interceptions as well as 48 yards on 16 carries despite being sacked four times.

Three consecutive plays Jefferson made in a sequence in the first minute of the fourth quarter to tie the game at 24-24 spoke volumes. He played most of the night like a man among boys.

He got Arkansas out of a second-and-20 hole at the Hogs’ 27 by first scrambling for a 14-yard gain. He followed that by dancing out of harm’s way, relocating to an open space and finding a wide-open Hasz for a 59-yard TD. Then, Hasz caught a Jefferson two-point conversion bullet pass in the back of the end for the tie with 14:11 left in the fourth quarter.

“He’s bigger than a defensive tackle,” marveled LSU linebacker Greg Penn III, who had a team-high 12 tackles along with safety Major Burns.

When LSU linebacker Harold Perkins Jr. was flagged for a roughing the passer penalty that kept alive Arkansas’ final drive, Kelly took umbrage with the nearest member of the officiating crew.

“There was no blow to the neck or head (by Perkins), but he (the official) thought it was unnecessary,” Kelly said. “My response was, `He’s 252 pounds, you try to tackle him.’ We couldn’t get him down on the ground. You can’t bring a rope out there.”

LSU’s final 10-play balanced Daniels completing 3 of 4 passes for 42 yards and running back Logan Diggs gaining 30 of his game-total 97 yards rushing on 14 carries.

At the end, after Kelly milked the clock down to next-to-nothing before Ramos’ field goal, there was just enough time for Jefferson to launch a desperation heave that didn’t really have a chance.

“That’s what you come to the SEC for, two quarterbacks battling and leaving it all out on the field,” Jefferson said. “Even after the game, we shook hands, gave each other respect and moved on.”

While Arkansas (2-2, 0-1 SEC West) next faces Texas A&M in Arlington, LSU plays at Ole Miss in the first of two straight road games. The Rebels suffered their first loss of the season Saturday in a 24-10 loss at Alabama.

“We played well offensively at the end of the first half and in the second half,” Kelly said. “Defensively, there is a lot that has to continue to get better. Most of them are self-inflicted wounds that are going to have to improve as we go on the road these next two weeks.”

Contact Ron at ronhigginsmedia@gmail.com


LSU Tigers 34, Arkansas Razorbacks 31 – scoring and statistics 

BIG FINISH:  LSU quarterback Jayden Daniels started slow but recovered with a spectacular second half Saturday night. (File photo by GUS STARK, LSU Athletics)
 

JOURNAL SPORTS 

LSU 34, ARKANSAS 31 

Score by quarters 

  1st 2nd 3rd 4th Final
Ark 3 10 3 15 — 31
LSU 0 10 14 10 — 34

Scoring summary 

Ark – Cam Little 23 field goal, 12 plays, 51 yards, 6:53 

Ark – Little 23 field goal, 12 plays, 75 yards, 6:51 

LSU – Damian Ramos 24 field goal, 8 plays, 68 yards, 2:31 

Ark – Tyrone Broden 19 pass from KJ Jefferson (Little kick), 8 plays, 75 yards, 3:14 

LSU – Brian Thomas Jr. 49 pass from Jayden Daniels (Ramos kick), 3 plays, 75 yards, 0:18 

LSU – Thomas 49 pass from Daniels (Ramos kick), 3 plays, 75 yards, 1:00 

Ark – Little 40 field goal, 15 plays, 53 yards, 8:16 

LSU – Malik Nabers 8 pass from Daniels (Ramos kick), 9 plays, 75 yards, 4:04 

Ark – Luke Hasz 59 pass from Jefferson (Hasz pass from Jefferson), 6 plays, 75 yards, 2:29 

LSU – Nabers 20 pass from Daniels (Ramos kick), 9 plays, 75 yards, 4:28 

Ark – Hasz 11 pass from Jefferson (Little kick), 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:37 

LSU – Ramos 20 field goal, 9 plays, 72 yards, 5:01 

TEAM STATISTICS

  Ark LSU
FIRST DOWNS 25 26
Rush 9 9
Pass 13 14
Penalty 3 3
TOTAL YARDS 426 509
Total plays 68 58
Avg. per play 6.3 8.8
RUSHING YARDS 137 189
Total rushes 37 29
Avg. per rush 3.7 6.5
PASSING YARDS 289 320
Comp-Att 21-31 20-29
Comp. Pct. 68% 69%
Interceptions 1 2
Punts-Avg. 1-53.0 2-38.0
Inside 20 1 0
Penalties-yards 11-69 5-51
Fumbles – lost 2-0 0-0
Red Zone attempts 5-5 4-4
Red Zone pts. 23 20
3rd down conv. 8-13 6-10
4th down conv. 1-1 0-0
Possession Time 34:22 25:38

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 

RUSHING 

Ark –  Rashod Dubinion 15-78; Jefferson 16-48; Max Fletcher 1-8; Dominique Johnson 2-3; AJ Green 3-0. 

LSU – Logan Diggs 14-97; Josh Williams 1-41; Daniels 10-36; Kaleb Jackson 2-12; John Emery Jr. 2-3. 

PASSING 

Ark –  Jefferson 21-31-2-289, 3 TDs. 

LSU – Daniels 20-29-1-320, 4 TDs. 

RECEIVING 

Ark – Hasz 6-116, 2 TDs; Andres Armstrong 6-76; Dubinion 3-35; Isaac Teslaa 3-31; Broden 3-31, 1 TD. 

LSU – Nabers 8-130, 2 TDs; Thomas 5-133, 2 TDs; Mason Taylor 3-33; Aaron Andreson 2-14; j. Williams 1-7; Diggs 1-3. 

TACKLES 

Ark – Jaheim Thomas 3-10—13; Alfahiym 5-3—8; Chris Paul 3-5—8; Hudson Clark 5-2—7; Cameron Ball 1-5—6; Lorando Johnson 1-2—3; Dwight McGlothern 3-0—3; Jaheim Singletary 2-1—3; Eric Gergory 0-2—2; Taurean Carter 0-1—1; Landon Jackson 0-1—1; Jashaud Stewart 0-1—1; Keivie Rose 1-0—1. 

LSU – Major Burns 7-5—12; Greg Penn III 3-9—12; Whit Weeks 2-7—9; Andre Sam 3-4—7; Harold Perkins Jr. 3-2—5; Denver Harris 5-0—5; Zy Alexander 2-3—5; Mekhi Wingo 2-2—4; Sai’vion Jones 0-4—4; Jordan Jefferson 0-3—3; Maason Smith 1-1—2; Bradyn Swinson 0-2—2; Da’Shawn Womack 2-0—2; Duc Chestnut 0-2—2; Jayden Daniels 0-1—1; Sage Ryan 1-0—1; Miles Frazier 0-1—1; Jacobian Guillory 0-1—1; Paris Shand 0-1—1. 


How LSWA Top 10-ranked teams and contenders fared

CAVS HOLD SERVE:  Getting their toughest test so far, the state’s top-ranked 2A Calvary Baptist Cavaliers and prolific quarterback Abram Wardell (4) topped Wossman Friday night. (Journal photo by GAVEN HAMMOND, landgphoto.com)

JOURNAL SPORTS

CLASS 5A   

    1. John Curtis (3-0) beat Jesuit, 41-21
    2. Edna Karr (3-0) beat St. Augustine, 27-16 
    3. Destrehan (4-0) beat Hahnville, 47-11 
    4. Zachary (3-0) beat McKinley, 54-6 
    5. Ruston (4-0) beat Lafayette Christian, 29-26 
    6. Carencro (4-0) beat Sulphur, 57-14 
    7. Catholic-BR (2-2) lost to St. Thomas More, 35-28 
    8. West Monroe (4-0) beat Scotlandville, 30-12 
    9. Acadiana (3-1) beat Lafayette, 63-12 
    10. St. Augustine (2-1) lost to Karr, 27-16

Others receiving votes: Airline (4-0) beat Benton, 60-35, East St. John (4-0) beat Thibodaux, 49-14, Dutchtown (3-0) did not play, Southside (3-1) beat New Iberia, 49-26, Brother Martin (3-1) beat Ouachita Parish, 31-14, Mandeville (2-2) lost to Northshore, 23-16.  

CLASS 4A 

  1. St. Thomas More (4-0) beat Catholic-BR, 35-28
  2. Lafayette Christian (3-1) lost to Ruston, 29-26 
  3. Neville (4-0) beat North Caddo, 54-0 
  4. Westgate (4-0) beat St. Martinville, 49-32 
  5. Warren Easton (1-3) beat BTW-NO, 28-6 
  6. North DeSoto (3-1) beat Minden, 51-0 
  7. Lutcher (2-1) beat Vandebilt Catholic, 18-0 
  8. West Feliciana (3-1) beat Tara, 41-14 
  9. Teurlings Catholic (3-1) beat Notre Dame, 34-14 
  10. Opelousas (2-2) lost to St. Amant, 28-22 

Others receiving votes: Leesville (2-2) lost to Catholic-N.I., 31-14, Archbishop Shaw (2-2) beat Bonnabel, 34-0, Evangel (2-2) beat Bossier, 49-0, Cecilia (3-1) beat Crowley, 65-14, Tioga (4-0) beat Marksville, 42-14, Vandebilt Catholic (2-2) lost to Lutcher, 18-0, Plaquemine (3-1) beat Istrouma, 20-15, De La Salle (1-3) lost to St. Charles, 32-14.  

CLASS 3A   

  1. University (3-1) beat Helix Mentorship, 55-0
  2. St. James (3-1) beat Assumption, 33-20 
  3. E.D. White (4-0) beat Woodlawn-BR, 57-7 
  4. Sterlington (3-1) beat Carroll, 46-6 
  5. Madison Prep (2-2) lost to Parkview Baptist, 28-21 
  6. Jena (4-0) beat Winnfield, 32-20 
  7. Union Parish (2-2) beat Bastrop, 41-14 
  8. Parkview Baptist (3-1) beat Madison Prep, 28-21 
  9. John F. Kennedy (3-1) won by forfeit 
  10. St. Louis (3-1) beat Kinder, 45-20 

Others receiving votes: Amite (2-1) beat Country Day, 39-0, Carroll (3-1) lost to Sterlington, 46-6, Bogalusa (2-2) lost to John Ehret, 49-39, Lake Charles Prep (2-2) beat South Beauregard, 20-14, Iota (3-1) beat Ville Platte, 49-8, Iowa (2-2) beat Jennings, 35-28, Kinder (3-1) lost to St. Louis, 45-20, Marksville (3-1) lost to Tioga, 42-14, Wossman (3-1) lost to Calvary, 21-6.  

CLASS 2A 

  1. Calvary (4-0) beat Wossman, 21-6 
  2. St. Charles (4-0) beat De La Salle, 32-14 
  3. Newman (4-0) beat Many, 49-31 
  4. Notre Dame (2-2) lost to Teurlings Catholic, 34-14 
  5. Dunham (3-1) beat Ascension Catholic, 29-28 
  6. Oak Grove (2-2) beat Rayville, 63-26 
  7. Many (2-2) lost to Newman, 49-31 
  8. Episcopal-BR  (3-1) beat Port Allen, 55-19 
  9. Northlake Christian (4-0) beat Hannan, 23-10 
  10. Loreauville (3-1) beat North Vermilion, 17-10 

Others receiving votes: Catholic-N.I. (3-1) beat Leesville, 31-14, Ascension Episcopal (2-2) lost to Breaux Bridge, 51-16, Oakdale (4-0) beat Grand Lake, 44-38, South Plaquemines (2-2) beat Sarah Reed, 57-13.  

CLASS 1A   

  1. Ouachita Christian (4-0) beat Tensas, 59-0 
  2. Kentwood (3-1) lost to Walker, 30-8 
  3. Vermilion Catholic (4-0) beat Erath, 38-14 
  4. Southern Lab (2-1) beat Opelousas Catholic, 60-35 
  5. Homer (4-0) beat Magnolia Charter, 48-12 
  6. St. Martin’s (3-0) did not play 
  7. Riverside (3-1) beat Houma Christian, 40-7 
  8. Haynesville (4-0) beat Glenbrook, 34-14 
  9. Ascension Catholic (3-1) lost to Dunham, 29-28 
  10. St. Mary’s (4-0) beat DeQuincy, 21-12 

Others receiving votes: Glenbrook (3-1) lost to Haynesville, 34-14, Logansport (3-1) beat Mansfield, 32-24, St. Frederick (2-2) beat Delhi Charter, 43-8. 


Cornhuskers can’t put away Bulldogs, but prevail in slugfest

SMOKE SHOW:  Louisiana Tech receiver Smoke Harris gave Nebraska fits Saturday, making 10 catches. (Photo by JOSH MCDANIEL, Louisiana Tech Athletics).

JOURNAL SPORTS

LINCOLN, Neb. – Louisiana Tech was knotted up with Nebraska at halftime, but the Cornhuskers used the ground game to pull away from the Bulldogs for a hard-fought 28-14 decision in front of 87,115 fans on Saturday inside Memorial Stadium.

Louisiana Tech (2-3) and Nebraska (2-2) went scoreless in the first quarter and then traded touchdowns in the second quarter to make it 7-all at the midway point. However, the Cornhuskers scored 21 unanswered points in the second half, 14 in the fourth quarter, to subdue the upset-minded Bulldogs.

Nebraska finally broke through after a fake field goal to pick up a first down. Two plays later, a jet sweep went nine yards for the first touchdown of the game with 11:31 to go in the second quarter.

Cyrus Allen appeared to tie the game with a 94-yard kickoff return, but a holding penalty erased the touchdown and put the Bulldogs back at their own 12. The flag was one of 12 marked off against the visitors for 100 yards.

The plucky visitors overcame that cancelled TD to tie the game on the ensuing possession and it was a big third down version from midfield that made it happen. Making his first career start at quarterback, Jack Turner dropped in a dime to Allen up the left sideline for 28 yards. The completion set up a 14-yard Jacob Fields touchdown run off left tackle, making it 7-7 with 6:07 remaining in the half.

The Bulldog defense stood tall again late in the second quarter, and when a 41-yard field goal attempt missed the score stayed deadlocked at halftime.

Ater the Cornhuskers recovered their own fumble on the second-half kickoff, they drove 85 yards on nine rushing plays to retake the lead, 14-7 five minutes into the third period.

A pivotal moment came later in the period.

A questionable spot on a potential first down catch by DeColdest Crawford was not changed by a replay and made it 4th-and-1 from the Nebraska 28-yard line. The Bulldogs attempted a quarterback sneak but did not pick up the first down, and were spurned in a bid to draw even.

The Cornhuskers cashed in a short field later in the quarter, resulting in a 29-yard touchdown pass from Heinrich Haarberg to Thomas Fidone II early in the fourth quarter.

The Bulldogs looked primed to slice into the deficit, getting a 35-yard Smoke Harris catch and run, one of his game-high 10 receptions. Harris then drew a pass interference on a third-and-long, but the flag was waved off to the justifiable dismay of Tech coach Sonny Cumbie and the Bulldogs were forced to punt.

“It wasn’t a great explanation,” Cumbie said. “They thought both guys were going up for the football at the same time. That was a tough one. If we get a first down (by penalty), it’s 21-7 with a chance to make it 21-14. (Instead) it’s 28-7 pretty quick, so that part was disappointing.”

Three plays later, Haarberg shook off an ankle tackle at the line of scrimmage and dashed 72 yards to put Nebraska up 28-7.

After a 55-minute lightning delay midway through the fourth period, the Bulldogs found the end zone on another Turner-to-Allen connection, a 20-yard grab in the corner of the end zone with 5:17 remaining.

Nebraska outgained Louisiana Tech, 419-338, with 312 Cornhusker yards coming on the ground. Turner finished with 292 passing yards with his two favorite targets being Harris – 10 receptions for 73 yards – and Allen – six catches for 102 yards.

While the Bulldog offensive line allowed no sacks, the Bulldog defense racked up nine tackles-for-loss, including three sacks. Nebraska entered the contest third nationally in making QB sacks.

“I was really proud of our offensive line. It did a nice job of protection, and Jack did a good job of extending plays late,” said Cumbie.

Asked what he will take forward into the return to league play, which comes next Friday night at UTEP, Cumbie had a short hit list.

“The penalties, and execution on offense was sloppy today. Special teams, we knew we had a chance to impact the game, and the penalty hurt us. We had a touchdown. Defensively, we’ve got to stop the run. We gave up three plays for 150 yards. We’ve got to eliminate the explosive plays.”

He had a message he shared with his players before kickoff, and reinforced it afterwards.

“We started the day 1-0 in Conference USA, we finished the day 1-0 in Conference USA. We have seven (CUSA) games ahead of us, everything that we want to accomplish,” said Cumbie. “I think they should take a lot of confidence from this game. We have to apply it in the right way as coaches and as players.”


Grambling’s run game gets it done in rugged SWAC opener

TIGER TD: Lyndon Rash (10) hauled in a 10-yard touchdown throw from Myles Crawley before halftime of the Tigers’ SWAC-opening win Saturday at Eddie G. Robinson Stadium. (Photo by T. SCOTT BOATRIGHT, Lincoln Parish Journal)

By T. SCOTT BOATRIGHT, Lincoln Parish Journal

GRAMBLING – In a game that at times resembled a heavyweight slugfest, Grambling State won by unanimous decision.

The G-Men kept swinging — and scoring — until the very end and held on for a 35-23 Southwestern Athletic Conference win over Texas Southern Saturday afternoon at Eddie G. Robinson Stadium.

While it certainly didn’t come easily, GSU head coach Hue Jackson was simply pleased to outlast the winless visitors.

“I’m excited for our players, our fans, our supporters to be able to watch us get the first (SWAC) win against Texas Southern at home,” Jackson said. “We knew it was going to be a dogfight. That’s a good football team regardless of what their record is. I think our guys battled extremely hard. We understand the momentum in games and how it comes and goes.

“There are some things we know we have to continue to clean up and get better at, but I’m excited because we’re winning. We’re starting to stack wins together and that’s what you have to do in this conference. These conference games mean a lot, so to open at home with a victory was very important.”

Winning at home for the second straight week, Grambling went to a double-barrelled ground-and-pound offensive attack with sophomore running backs Chance Williams and Floyd Chalk IV attacking the TSU defense right from the opening kickoff.

The G-Men took their second possession and marched 49 yards on seven plays with Chalk plunging to paydirt from one yard out to put Grambling up 7-0 midway through the first quarter.

Grambling went on top 14-7 at intermission thanks to quarterback Myles Crawley firing a 17-yard touchdown to Lyndon Rash, who outbattled a TSU defensive back for the ball, with seven seconds left in the second quarter. He added a second-half TD catch.

“Lyndon is one of those guys who doesn’t complain, doesn’t say ‘give me the ball,’” Jackson said. “He’s always about the team. Every now and then I want him to be selfish, because he’s that kind of player.”

Texas Southern (0-4, 0-1) battled back to open the second half, marching 49 yards and kicking a 41-yard field goal that cut Grambling’s lead to 14-10 only 4:09 into the third quarter.

Grambling quickly landed a counterpunch, pushing its advantage to 21-10 on an 11-yard scoring scamper by Williams at the 7:27 mark of the third stanza.

Williams finished the day with 174 yards on 19 rushing attempts as part of a GSU rushing attack that totaled 282 yards on 48 carries. Chalk also had a strong game, totalling 88 yards and a pair of touchdowns on 17 touches.

“I think we can run the football,” Jackson said. “I’ve always said that. We have good backs. We have a good offensive line. We work at it. But we miss some things, too, at times, but we have some good runners and they know how to run the football and I think we’ll continue to get better at it.”

Texas Southern battled back with Wilson hitting Eyan Means on a 34-yard touchdown pass that cut GSU’s lead to 21-17 with 1:37 left in the third quarter.

But once again GSU quickly responded as Crawley connected with Rash on a 10-yard scoring strike to put the G-Men up 28-17 with 11:27 to go.

Texas Southern followed that blow with one of its own as Wilson fired his third scoring pass of the game, hitting Jyrin Johnson on a 25-yarder to shrink Grambling’s lead to 28-23 (TSU missed the point after) with 8:12 left on the clock.

Then Grambling delivered the knockout, as Chalk again scored on a 1-yard run with 3:25 remaining to seal up the win and move the G-Men to 2-2 overall in the SWAC lidlifter for both clubs.

Jackson was pleased to see how his team consistently responded to TSU scores, crediting Crawley for leading that charge.

“Those were very important,” Jackson said of GSU’s last two touchdown drives. “When you have an offense that can answer, a quarterback with that kind of calmness. His whole thing was, ‘Don’t worry about it Coach, we’ll take care of it.’ And that’s what you want. There was never any doubt on our sideline, and that’s because we have a quarterback that you believe and who’s going to go and take the team down the field.”

Contact Scott at tscottboatright@gmail.com


Parkway stays perfect, cruising to Brotherton Bowl triumph

(Journal photo by GAVEN HAMMOND, landgphoto.com)

JOURNAL STAFF

This year, there was no nerve-wracking finish. And Aaron Burrell’s field goal was a mundane 27-yarder, not a game-winning 50-yard bomb in the final seconds.

Playing at its Preston Crownover Stadium, Parkway opened a four-score halftime lead and cruised to a 24-6 victory in the fourth annual “Brotherton Bowl” District 1-5A battle with Haughton Friday night. The contest pits brothers Coy (Parkway) and Jason (Haughton) against each other as head coaches.

“We played pretty good, offensively and defensively,” said Parkway’s Coy Brotherton. “They were handicapped without (injured starting QB Christian) Turner, but our defensive line got after them.”

So did senior defensive back Ashtin Jackson. He doubled his career interception total with a 50-yard first-half pick six return TD, and added another interception in the fourth quarter as the Parkway defense pitched a shutout.

The Panthers pounded away on a game-opening 15-snap scoring drive to go up 7-0 on C.J. Dudley’s 2-yarder. Five plays later, Jackson’s surprise swipe doubled the lead, which expanded to 21-0 when Parkway mounted another 15-play drive on its second series, with Kaleb Williams scoring from 4 yards out.

Parkway rolled (4-0, 1-0) to a 24-0 halftime advantage, capped by Burrell’s field goal at the horn.

“We knew it was going to be hard to score, hard to sustain drives,” said Haughton’s Jason Brotherton. “But we moved the ball OK. We just couldn’t score. The pick six put us in a hole, and then we were just chasing points, which is tough against a really good defense.”

Haughton’s only tally came when Austin Walton scooped and scored on a 92-yard fumble return TD.

“We played like a physical football team tonight,” said the Parkway coach. “I challenged the kids this week that since we were beginning district, we’d be playing 5A teams week after week and we’d have to be tough, flying around the football defensively, and we’d have to make some physical blocks offensively, have our receivers be a presence in the run game. They responded tonight.”

The brothers do understand the unique pleasure, and pain, of their annual on-field competition.

“It’s pretty special. It’s cool. But I hate playing against him because one of us has to lose,” said younger brother Coy. “I probably like playing earlier than later in the year, but since it’s the first district game one of us starts well and one doesn’t. Once the game starts, you forget he’s over there and coach your team. We shake hands after and tomorrow we’ll get to talking like we normally do.”

The Panthers are unbeaten through Week 4, but there’s not too much swagger in the Parkway camp.

“I’m pleased and cautious at the same time,” said Coy Brotherton. “Last year we were lucky enough to win the first six, but didn’t finish like we wanted to. Our talk all season has been to make sure we’re clicking at the right time, improving every week, and we feel like we have. We are headed in the right direction, but with sophomores at quarterback and running back there’s a lot of upside.”

The District 1-5A season for Parkway continues against Captain Shreve next week. Haughton will try to rebound against Southwood.

NATCHITOCHES CENTRAL 41, SOUTHWOOD 12:  In Natchitoches at Turpin Stadium, the Chiefs raced to a 28-0 halftime lead in a District 1-5A game plagued by 29 penalties for a combined 227 yards – each team had touchdowns wiped out by flags.

Calvary Baptist transfer Owen Smith threw four TD passes, starting with strikes of 16 yards to Dillon Braxton and 13 yards to Cam Davis that got NCHS (2-2, 1-0) up 14-0.

The Cowboys closed to 14-6 in the second quarter on a Michael Morgan Jr. 11-yard toss to Detanion Arkansas, but the Chiefs pulled away.  A 25-yard flea flicker pass from Smith to Davis was a highlight. Tailback Zion Thompson later tallied on a 46-yard run and added another TD on an 11-yard scamper.

Davis caught his third scoring strike from Smith, a 27-yarder, with eight minutes remaining. Smith finished with 221 yards passing on 16 of 19 aim, with David accounting for 144 of those yards on eight snags.

Three touchdowns were erased by penalties on Southwood (0-4, 0-1), which got a 7-yard DeTravion Williams TD run a minute before the game ended.

The Chiefs host Airline next Friday. Southwood gets Haughton as 1-5A competition continues.


Falcons finally take flight, score District 1-4A win over Raiders

JOURNAL STAFF

The Northwood Falcons made their 2023 debut Friday night.

Four games in, coach Austin Brown’s team picked a fine time to find its stride and post its first victory, a 27-12 decision over Huntington at Independence Stadium in the District 1-4A opener.

“It was good to finally see Northwood football for the first time all season,” said Brown, whose young team dropped its first three outings, two close losses before a blowout last week at Airline.

The district matchup against the Raiders was fraught with danger.

“They have speed, and we were well aware of that. We weren’t able to do a very good job last week with Airline’s speed and big-play ability,” said Brown. “The focus all week was to stay disciplined and in technique, but really the major focus was the will to win. We were 0-3, but we were only a few points away from 2-1.

“You could feel the kids had that taste in the first half. They might not have quite understood yet what it took to win, but they could feel it. Now our job is to make sure they understand what they were feeling and to keep it going.”

The Falcons and Raiders traded scores, although Northwood never trailed and carried a 14-12 advantage into halftime. Afterwards, playing keepaway from the explosive Huntington attack proved a winning strategy.

“In the second half we were able to be more effective offensively, do what we wanted,” said Brown, “and run some clock. We slowed our tempo when we had a solid lead.”

The outcome reversed last year’s, when Huntington topped Northwood on a day that Brown will always remember fondly – despite that defeat.

“My son (Braxton ‘Cooter’ Brown) was born last year at 1 o’clock, and I made it to the game about 30 minutes before kickoff,” he recalled.

“He didn’t get to start life off very well. So this week, the boys said, ‘it’s personal. We’ve gotta win one for Cooter’ and for his first birthday, he went 1-0.”

The Falcons (1-3, 1-0) celebrate homecoming against Bossier next week, then face Evangel. The Raiders (2-2, 0-1) visit Minden next Friday before meeting BTW to start October.