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Osaka, February 2010 - Recently the young Johoku team had developed a tendency of starting slow and staging furious comebacks. They always seemed to make things interesting. Our bogeymen had traditionally been low intensity and concentration lapses. Fresh off a 12 - 13 loss to Kobe's Rokko High School the boys were at it again.
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Half - time:
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Osaka Kindai Fuzoku... 19
Johoku............................ 0
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Down 19 - 0 at the half and out manned forty or so players to our own sixteen the kids pulled off one of those rare comebacks. In the last four minutes they executed a little bit of everything. Fake punts, blocked PATs, and on-side kicks, 100% conversion on all. On the last drive the kids performed the two minute offense to perfection covering half the field in four plays. It was as if the other team had become spectators.
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God only knows why our opponents were still throwing ahead 25 - 18 with under two minutes. The opposing quarterback had badly overthrown a receiver on the same route on consecutive plays. The first potential interception hit our safety in the chest but was dropped. The very next play they attempted the same exact pass to the same guy. This time our safety intercepted it and returned the ball to our opponent's five yard line.
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We'd already cut the deficit to seven (18 - 25) and needed eight for a victory.
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On first and goal from the opponent's five yard line with five seconds remaining the quarterback (#3) tossed a short pass to the running back (#43) who'd beat a linebacker on a "in-and-out" pattern for a touchdown. We were then down by one (24 - 25).
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Ironically we'd staged a similar comeback the previous game against Kobe's Rokko losing 12 - 13 on the doorstep of their end zone. As a result of that heartbreaking loss we'd emphasized minimal time situations in an effort to raise the player's concentration levels.
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I was anxious to see if the kids had retained the lesson about details and mental focus sometimes being the difference.
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The game clock indicated one second remaining with the all important two point conversion looming. The quarterback looked to the sideline for the call and I motioned it was OK for him to do the honors. Immediately my conscience intervened and I used the final time-out, just to make sure.
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By the manner in which the kids broke the huddle and set themselves it appeared they'd achieved a high level of concentration. As the quarterback called the cadence the stadium fell silent with the exception of a jet that happened to be passing over.
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The quarterback took a direct snap and rolled left, a play similar to the one we'd scored on previously but to the opposite side. On this play the running back ran a fast "flat out" pattern towards a spot just inside the left front pylon of the end zone. The quarterback (fastest kid on the field) rolled toward the play and had the option of passing or sprinting to the pylon himself.
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This time the outside linebacker had better coverage on the running back (#43), who appeared to be ready to make the catch. It would be a tight window for the throw. Leaving nothing to chance the quarterback accelerated and actually followed the linebacker covering the running back into the end zone. ...Time remaining 00:00.
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Final: Johoku 26, Osaka Kindai Fuzoku 25.
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.Johoku (white) vs Osaka Kindai Fuzoku.
Late 4th Quarter
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As always the guys started out slow and found themselves in a 19 - 0 hole by half-time. Somehow they put it all together in the third quarter. Every kid in a Johoku uniform did a little extra. The "bug chaser" who'd cried in his first scrimmage nine months prior made a clutch catch on fourth and seven during the final drive. He could have took it all the way in storybook fashion but he slipped and fell as he always does. You can't make this stuff up.
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.The other team had to run sprints after losing. (2010) Osaka |
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.Gathering gear before heading to the bus for the six hour ride home. (2010) Osaka . . . . >For more click here< . . |