Container Top
Homes   Jobs   Cars   Shopping
Search

Events Calendar

EVENT SEARCH:

In This Section


Most Read Stories


Blogs:


Pets:
Sick Pets Get High-tech Health Care

The Heldenfiles:
Friday Night Notebook

Patrick McManamon:
The proposed new LeBron mural doesn't do it for me

Akron Zips:
Two blowouts, one night

Tribe Matters:
Seven players added to Tribe’s 40-man roster

Cleveland Browns:
Hey, somebody's gotta stick up for the Browns

Kent State Sports:
Singletary update

Cleveland Cavaliers:
Gameblog: Cavs at Indiana Pacers

Buckeye Blogging:
OSU – Michigan college football rivals meet in Baghdad

Varsity Letters:
Bowling season starts today

All Da King's Men:
Attention Haters, Palin And Hannity Together

Blog of Mass Destruction:
Muslim McCarthyism & Death Prayers

Akron Law Café:
Federal Judge Declares DOMA Unconstitutional

See Jane Style:
Vintage Chic

Car Chase:
TIME TO GET YOUR COLLECTOR CARS WINTERIZED

Let's Talk Real Estate:
Silverdome Potentially SOLD!

Ohio Travels with Betty:
Norma asks if Barkitecture is still at Stan Hywet.

Sound Check:
Steely Dan Plays "The Royal Scam" at E.J. Thomas Hall

HRLite House:
Colloquium at University of Akron

Akron Gamer:
Nintendo's Mario endures even as games come and go

Hoban 14, Parma Padua 11
Kickoff returns carry Knights to playoff win

Kirksey-Ivery scores one touchdown, sets up another to lead Hoban to victory

By Jim Isabella
Special to the Beacon Journal

Xavier Kirksey-Ivery rarely gets a chance to return kickoffs.

After watching what he did to Parma Padua, it is easy to see why teams rarely kick to him.

The Archbishop Hoban junior had two big kickoff returns, one for a touchdown, and the Knights defeated the Bruins 14-11 in a Division III regional quarterfinal at Dowed Field.

The victory sends the Knights (8-3) into the Division III regional semifinal against Poland Seminary, a 38-14 winner over St. Vincent-St. Mary.

The rematch of the Knights' 10-6 win a few weeks ago in a North Coast League showdown was the same kind of defensive battle with neither team able to sustain drives.

''Our special teams and our defense with one exception played extremely well,'' said Hoban coach Ralph Orsini said.

Without the kick returns, Hoban's season might have been over. The offense was anemic with 124 yards and five first downs.

Kirksey-Ivery's first kick return of 92 yards came after Padua had taken a 3-0 lead on a field by Padua's Zach Paul from 28 yards with 7:08 to play in the second quarter.

The Knights' wide receiver came up the middle, cut to his right and set sail before being brought down at the Padua 4-yard line.

The touchdown came two plays later when the Knights surprised the Bruins by coming out of the shotgun at the 5-yard line with junior quarterback Dan Hinton hitting a wide open LaTroy Lewis, who had lined up as a tight end and no one picked him up.

Zach Christensen's point after gave Hoban a 7-3 lead with 6:01 left in the fist half.

It was Kirksey-Ivery's second kickoff return to start the second half that gave the Knights some breathing room.

This time the junior grabbed the ball at the 5 and raced through a gaping hole, then used a down-field block by senior Ben Coudriet to cut back and just crossed the goal line as he was being tackled, giving Hoban a 14-3 lead.

''Coach [Paul] Yappel changed up the kick return. I just hit the hole and my teammates did the rest,'' Kirksey-Ivery said.

Padua's offense was also struggling against the Hoban defense, rushing for 78 yards on 30 carries.

The desperate Bruins finally sustained a drive after stopping Hoban when a fourth-and-1 gamble backfired and quarterback David Bott was sacked at the Hoban 38.

Going with a no-huddle offense, the Bruins marched 62 yards in nine plays, with senior quarterback James Flowers hitting Nick Kaszei with a 20-yard touchdown pass with 6:55 to go.

The two hooked up on the 2-point conversion pass to cut the deficit to 14-11.

The Knights' defense rose up and snuffed out Padua's last chance when junior Evan Luse intercepted a Flowers pass at the Hoban 24 with 1:55 to go.

Bott, who came in relief of a banged up Hinton, then had three runs of 5 yards to get a crucial first down and run out the clock.

''Dan had been in a car accident on Sunday and was struggling. We probably should have made the change earlier,'' Orsini said. ''If we want to win next week, we have to get our offense going.''

Archbishop Hoban High's Xavier Kirksey-Ivery outruns a bevy of Parma Padua Franciscan High defenders on a punt return in the second quarter of the Divison II playoff game at Hoban's Dowed Field on Friday In Akron. (Mike Cardew/Akron Beacon Journal)

Xavier Kirksey-Ivery rarely gets a chance to return kickoffs.

After watching what he did to Parma Padua, it is easy to see why teams rarely kick to him.

The Archbishop Hoban junior had two big kickoff returns, one for a touchdown, and the Knights defeated the Bruins 14-11 in a Division III regional quarterfinal at Dowed Field.

The victory sends the Knights (8-3) into the Division III regional semifinal against Poland Seminary, a 38-14 winner over St. Vincent-St. Mary.

The rematch of the Knights' 10-6 win a few weeks ago in a North Coast League showdown was the same kind of defensive battle with neither team able to sustain drives.

''Our special teams and our defense with one exception played extremely well,'' said Hoban coach Ralph Orsini said.

Without the kick returns, Hoban's season might have been over. The offense was anemic with 124 yards and five first downs.

Kirksey-Ivery's first kick return of 92 yards came after Padua had taken a 3-0 lead on a field by Padua's Zach Paul from 28 yards with 7:08 to play in the second quarter.

The Knights' wide receiver came up the middle, cut to his right and set sail before being brought down at the Padua 4-yard line.

The touchdown came two plays later when the Knights surprised the Bruins by coming out of the shotgun at the 5-yard line with junior quarterback Dan Hinton hitting a wide open LaTroy Lewis, who had lined up as a tight end and no one picked him up.

Zach Christensen's point after gave Hoban a 7-3 lead with 6:01 left in the fist half.

It was Kirksey-Ivery's second kickoff return to start the second half that gave the Knights some breathing room.

This time the junior grabbed the ball at the 5 and raced through a gaping hole, then used a down-field block by senior Ben Coudriet to cut back and just crossed the goal line as he was being tackled, giving Hoban a 14-3 lead.

''Coach [Paul] Yappel changed up the kick return. I just hit the hole and my teammates did the rest,'' Kirksey-Ivery said.

Padua's offense was also struggling against the Hoban defense, rushing for 78 yards on 30 carries.

The desperate Bruins finally sustained a drive after stopping Hoban when a fourth-and-1 gamble backfired and quarterback David Bott was sacked at the Hoban 38.

Going with a no-huddle offense, the Bruins marched 62 yards in nine plays, with senior quarterback James Flowers hitting Nick Kaszei with a 20-yard touchdown pass with 6:55 to go.

The two hooked up on the 2-point conversion pass to cut the deficit to 14-11.

The Knights' defense rose up and snuffed out Padua's last chance when junior Evan Luse intercepted a Flowers pass at the Hoban 24 with 1:55 to go.

Bott, who came in relief of a banged up Hinton, then had three runs of 5 yards to get a crucial first down and run out the clock.

''Dan had been in a car accident on Sunday and was struggling. We probably should have made the change earlier,'' Orsini said. ''If we want to win next week, we have to get our offense going.''



Story tools

Email  Email   Print  Print   Save  Save   Reprint  Reprint   Popular  Most Popular   Reprint  Subscribe

Share this story

AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Slovensko
Canton, OH

Posted 07:44 AM, 11/07/2009

SWEET. . .The gold shoes are sweet. . .
















Most Commented Stories