Page One

Yellowjackets can’t stop Dos Palos rushing attack

By Tuukka Hess Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday September 25, 2000

Broncos gain 396 yards on the ground in 48-7 win 

 

Armed with a brutal ground attack, Dos Palos trampled Berkeley High into their own Astroturf Friday night, inflicting a 48-7 beating upon a school more than five times its size. Operating for most of the evening out of a two tight end set, Dos Palos amassed 408 yards of total offense, 396 of them on the ground. Junior running back Kenny James presented an especially impressive image of the Broncos’ dominance, rushing for 227 yards on 17 carries and four touchdowns.  

Berkeley was forced to contend with James’ game-breaking ability from the opening kickoff, which he returned 76 yards to the Yellowjackets’ two-yard line. A few seconds and a quick pitch later, James scored the Broncos’ first points on a sweep right, giving the Broncos a 7-0 lead only 18 seconds into the game. 

Undaunted, the ‘Jackets roared back on the ensuing kickoff, freeing wide receiver Charles West on a reverse for a 76-yard scamper of their own. Two plays later, having backed the Broncos to their own nine-yard line, Berkeley committed the first of their three turnovers when senior Joey Terry-Jones fumbled a poor pitch from quarterback Leon Ireland.  

Neither Dos Palos nor Berkeley was able to put anything together on the next three possessions, until James again stamped the game with his big-play ability. Taking over on their own 27-yard line after a Berkeley turnover on downs, Dos Palos looked to their dominant offensive line to give them room to sweep left. James eyed a gaping hole, broke a tackle and cut back to the right sideline, streaking 59 yards to the Berkeley 14-yard line. Two plays later James barreled into the endzone for his second touchdown of the evening, giving the Broncos a 14-0 lead with 4:09 remaining in the first quarter.  

The Yellow Jackets responded with their longest sustained drive of the game, a 13-play, 42-yard affair that ate up 5:52 on the clock. Sticking to the ground, Berkeley rushed for 38 yards on five carries, and completed only one of four passes for four yards. Unable to capitalize on a Dos Palos holding penalty that negated a fumble, the ‘Jackets’ drive stalled at the Broncos’ 15-yard line and Dos Palos took over on downs. 

In what was quickly becoming a hallmark of the night, Dos Palos turned to James once again, and he didn’t disappoint. Bursting through the line and over Ireland, who plays safety on the defensive side of the ball, James sprinted 36 yards to Berkeley’s 49-yard line to begin the Broncos’ longest drive of the game. The Broncos ran on eight of their next nine plays, and slowly marched into the endzone, grinding the score out to 20-0 and eating up 6:51 of the game clock.  

After the game, James noted the success of his team’s grind-it-out style: “We came out with the same old game play. We ran the ball good, the line was there opening up holes, and the game was just beautiful.” 

Hoping to spark his flagging offense, Berkeley Coach Gary Weaver inserted his starting quarterback, Muhammed Nitoto, after disciplining him for the first quarter. Dos Palos brought the blitz, hitting Nitoto hard on his first possession. Nitoto coughed up the ball, and giving the Broncos’ offense the ball 13 yards from the goal line. Three plays and one two-point conversion later, Dos Palos had increased their lead to 28-0, and gave James his third touchdown of the game.  

Berkeley tried desperately to get on the scoreboard before halftime, but a stingy Broncos’ defense and an ill-advised pass stood in the way. Facing third and two on their own 47-yard line with time ticking away, Nitoto launched a Hail Mary pass toward the endzone. James intercepted the pass, and the Broncos had the ball on their own 31-yard line with one second remaining in the half. Dos Palos called timeout, and they came up with a play that mystified the ‘Jacket defense. The Dos Palos offensive line offered a gaping hole to quarterback Leonard Davis, and he sprinted 69 yards straight down the field to give the Broncos a 35-0 halftime lead.  

One may have expected the Yellow Jackets to fold in the second half, but they did no such thing. Facing a third and four on their own 30-yard line, Nitoto reared back and aired the ball out, finding wide receiver Chavellier Patterson on the Dos Palos 35 yard-line. Patterson broke one tackle and raced down the right sideline to give ‘Jackets their only touchdown of the game. 

"I saw that we had a little cornerback on one of our taller wide receivers, and I think that our wide receivers are probably the best out there, so I had a lot of confidence that he could out-run the man, or if he needed to out-jump him, so I just threw it up to him, and he made the play," Nitoto said after the game. 

If Berkeley had planned a comeback, however, it was short-circuited by the Broncos. The Dos Palos offensive line pounded Berkeley into submission, opening hole after hole for the Broncos ballcarriers to squirt through. The Broncos tacked on two more touchdowns, eating up most of the second half with three- and four-yard carries. 

Berkeley, on the other hand, ramained out of sync, and was repeatedly paralyzed by drive-stalling penalties. The Yellow Jackets accumulated 5 penalties for 32 yards on the night, but most of these yards came when they were least needed. In a game of inches, the Berkeley offense was frequently stopped a few yards short.  

Noting the problems that the Dos Palos defense presented him with, Nitoto said: "We tried to throw them off by doing an off-set line, but they starting catching onto it after we did it so many times. They just kept the middle clogged up, and they starting putting two safeties back after the touchdown pass. So we couldn’t throw deep, but then we couldn’t throw over the middle either because they had the whole middle clogged up." 

Berkeley falls to 0-3, while Dos Palos improved their season mark to 2-1. Berkeley will travel to Livermore High this Thursday.