R-H sees progress despite loss
Published 9:40 am Wednesday, September 27, 2017
An expanded offensive arsenal and a strong effort from Randolph-Henry High School’s varsity football team gave fans good reason to cheer at homecoming Friday night, despite the Statesmen ultimately falling in a high-scoring affair to visiting Prince Edward County High School.
The contest was a fitting addition to the recent series between the Eagles and the Statesmen.
In 2015, Randolph-Henry won 56-46, the Eagles responded with a 45-40 win last year, and they followed that up with a 55-40 victory in Charlotte Court House on Friday.
But Statesmen Head Coach Zach Orlando saw plenty of reasons to be upbeat.
“I thought the fight was there,” he said. “I thought we fought them tooth and nail all the way. The problem we’re still having is, defensively, we’re spotting too many points early on, and then offensively, when we start trying to fight our way back into the game, we have too many mistakes. I thought this was a game we could have won…”
The first quarter set the tone for the night, with Prince Edward holding a 21-12 lead.
The Eagles pushed that advantage to 35-12 after two big touchdown passes in the second quarter.
Then the Statesmen responded, with sophomore Tyrik Beattie returning the ensuing kickoff to the Prince Edward 35-yard line. On the first play from scrimmage, senior Tyrie Blow-Tydings ran and reached the end zone to make the scoreboard read 35-18 with nine minutes and 13 seconds still to play in the first half.
Prince Edward returned the next kickoff to the Randolph-Henry 30-yard line and made it 42-18 shortly thereafter with 6:56 remaining.
The Statesmen responded with a productive drive capped by a 26-yard touchdown run from junior Treymon Roberts. The score was 42-26 after a successful run for a two-point conversion by Beattie with 1:06 on the clock.
Prince Edward wasn’t ready to break for halftime yet, though, as the Eagles drove down and reached the end zone on a short, patient run to help make the score 49-26 at the conclusion of the first half.
To open the second half, Randolph-Henry put together a promising drive, but it ended with a turnover when the Statesmen fumbled and Prince Edward recovered.
The Eagles were on the doorstep of another score, but then an interception caught by senior Aaron Crawley gave the ball back to Randolph-Henry on its own five-yard line.
A few plays later, freshman Peter Jones connected with Crawley for a 60-yard pass, as Crawley took the ball all the way to the Prince Edward 37-yard line. The Statesmen continued to drive, and Blow-Tydings scored on a five-yard run, creating a score of 49-32 with 1:55 left in the third quarter.
The scoreboard read 55-32 after Eagles converted a touchdown on a 59-yard touchdown run with 1:12 to go.
Beattie returned the ensuing kickoff to the Prince Edward 10-yard line. With 22 seconds remaining until the fourth quarter, Blow-Tydings found the end zone on a four-yard run, and Jones ran in the two-point conversion to make the score 55-40.
A key turnover thwarted R-H’s comeback effort in the fourth quarter.
Randolph-Henry (0-4) visits Amelia County High School next Friday at 7 p.m.