Payton Tops Lane 16-13 for Dominance on Northside

[Preview of my article in Inside—Booster.]

By Jack Lydon

Walter Payton College Prep may be the best high school on the northside of Chicago and it might also have the best football team as well. Record wise at least, one can’t argue with that. It doesn’t get better than 5-0 on the season. The Grizzlies defeated the Lane Tech Champions 16-13 Saturday afternoon at Lane Stadium.

Pretty much everyone knows takeaways and defense produces wins. That’s what the Grizzlies did on Saturday. It might been a little coaching too.

“We knew they struggle passing the ball, so we concentrated on stopping the run,” said Payton defensive coordinator Frank Dickerson.

The Grizzlies did not completely stop the Lane’s running attack. Senior tailback/quarterback/wildcat Vernon Cole still scored two touchdowns, a four-yard keeper early in the second quarter and a 53-yard keeper up the middle late in the fourth quarter. But Payton pretty much stopped everything else.

“I saw his eyes the whole way. He was staring there. We have been watching film. The only thing he has been throwing is inside slants and inside posts. I sat back, saw the ball and it was right there,” said Payton senior safety and running back Sam Merrill.

Merrill picked out the slant pass in the middle of the field and returned to ball to Lane’s 22 yard-line. That set up a one-yard touchdown by Payton quarter back Thomas Fritchett at the 7:52 mark in the third which gave the Grizzlies a 16-7 lead.

The Grizzlies defense continued to styme the Champions throughout the remainder of the third including another interception in Lane territory this time by senior cornerback John Seward. That takeaway did not lead to points but the ensusing long Payton possession took time off the clock.

Lane rallied with Cole’s 53-yard touchdown late in the fourth to make the score 16-13. And the Champions had a chance to tie with a field goal attempt with 30 seconds to play but the kick sailed left of the uprights.

Payton’s first year coach Calvin Clark was fired up after the game.

“It means a lot. At the end of the day, we prepared for this moment. We talk about mental toughness. We’ve got mental toughness. We expect to win,” said Payton head coach Calvin Clark. This is Clark’s first year at Payton. He previously was the head coach at Sullivan High School in Rogers Park.

Lane also has a first-year head coach. Lane’s Deshon Conley was disappointed with the turnovers by his Champions.

“The scoop and score fumble was probably the deciding score of the game,” Conley said. In the first quarter, Lane quarterback Robert Suteu directed a swing pass to his right. The receiver appeared to drop the pass but it was ruled a reception and fumble by the referee standing right next to the play in the backfield.

Payton quarterback Thomas Fritchett, who also plays defensive end, scooped up the fumble, ran it in 2o yards to give the Grizzlies a 10-0 lead at the end of the first quarter.

“Payton came prepared. We were a little lax today. It went against us,” Conley added.

This game went a long way to deciding the leading teams on the Northside. Both Lane and Payton came into the game at 4-0. Taft is 1-4. Lincoln Park is 3-2 but with losses to Whitney Young and Lane. Amundsen is struggling at 2-3. Payton can rightfully claim northside ascendency.

It gets no easier for the Grizzlies with Kenwood, King and Westinghouse to finishe the season. But for now, this week, Payton College Prep may be, just possibly, the best high school football team, Public League anyway, on the northside.

DePaul Prep Wins Playoff Game 48-8 over Dyett

[A preview of my story in Inside—Booster.]

By Jack Lydon

The DePaul Prep Rams (7-3) defeated the Dyett Eagles 48-8 Saturday afternoon at Stagg Stadium on the South side. The Rams had a 42-0 halftime lead on the Eagles so there was a running clock in the second half.

The Rams defense opened the game with an impressive start that set the tone for the rest of the game. Dyett had -17 years of total offense on the first two drives. The Rams offense answered with two quick touchdowns making the score 14-0 before Dyett had a first down.

Even with the two quick touchdowns, the Rams’ offense was not hitting on its usual strength the passing game and the passing and scrambling talent of senior quarterback Fernando “Juju” Rodriguez.

“I would say I was just antsy,” Rodriguez admitted after the game.

“I saw [Juju] after the second drive I grabbed him. I said dude, ‘you’ve gotta calm down.’ He was late. They ran a little bit of a different defense than what we say on films. So that was new and he was probably just trying to work through some adjustments,” said Rams’ head coach Mike Passarella.

Not that this was a big deal. They lead 14-0. And the defense was playing at a level they have not been at in weeks. A few incomplete passes is hardly a huge problem or even something unusual.  

The second quarter was a whole different story. Rodriguez calmed down. He scrambled around, avoiding tackles and making big throws. The Rams put up four touchdowns and extra points in the second quarter and took a 42-0 at the half.

While the final score of 48-8 might suggest that the Rams would be a heavy favorite coming into the game, which they were, the peculiarities of the IHSA seeding system had the Eagles as a #8 seed and the Rams as a #9 seed making Dyett the home team. The seeding system doesn’t take into account strength of schedule.

For instance, Sullivan High School finished the season 9-0 in the Chicago Public League’s White-North Division and earned a #1 seed in one side of the 4A bracket. However, Sullivan played only other CPL teams and no team from the CPL’s top division, the Red Division. Sullivan lost 42-0 Saturday at Winnemac Stadium to Geneseo, a rural school from Western Illinois just outside of the Quad Cities.

Geneseo, now 6-4, will be the Rams’ next opponent next Saturday as the 4A playoffs continue. This time the Rams’ will be a home team in playoff game for the first time in decades. Geneseo will once again have to travel across the state to Chicago for a playoff game. This game will prove a good deal more competitive for both squads.

The Geneseo Green Machine comes out of the Western Big 6 Conference, which has seven teams, where they finished in fifth place with a 5-4 record. Don’t be fooled by that. There are very good teams in that conference, including Quincy and Moline, both playoff 7A teams.

Geneseo employs a double wing offense that is difficult for teams to stop. The offense is something of an old-school run-heavy offense that controls the ball in three yards and a cloud of dust fashion. Old school or not, this offense can be very effective. Lane Tech head coach Dedrick Dewalt proved that a couple years ago when he dialed it up for Champions who won six straight with it and made the playoffs. The Rams coaching staff will have to be coaching up their players on how to stop the double wing.

Even more disconcerting about Geneseo has to be their uniforms. The Green Machine’s uniforms are basically the same as the Green Bay Packers. The mere sight of those yellow and green helmets are bound bring out a mix of hatred, anger and dread amongst the Rams players, coaches and fans.

DePaul Prep Rams Defeat Sullivan Tigers 32-12

DePaul Prep Rams move to 2-0 on the 2019 season with Friday afternoon’s 32-12 win over the talented Sullivan Tigers.