Another football win, 22-15

FALLS VILLAGE — The Housatonic/Wamogo defense wasn’t always perfect last Saturday, Sept. 24. But they were perfect when they had to be.The Mountaineers, with their backs to the wall and seconds left to play, dug in hard and staved off a last-minute drive to beat the Stafford Springs/East Windsor Bulldogs 22-15 in a game that had everyone, literally, on the edge of their seats.After a Mountaineers punt with just under four minutes to play, the visiting Bulldogs started on the Housy 41 with a drive that featured a converted fourth and eight, two rare pass plays and the gritty, determined ending that impressed Housatonic/Wamogo head coach Deron Bayer. “It was the kids making a play,” Bayer said. “We may have won the conditioning battle a little bit too, but this was a good football game. Two small schools, similar style, just out there battling each other right down to the end.”With the ball on the 10-yard line, the Mountaineer defense decided it was time to play the role of hero to Stafford Springs’ villain. Matt McElhone and Will Perotti strung out the attempted run to the left for a 3-yard loss on first down, and the Bulldogs converted on a short pass play on second down to move the ball to the Mountaineer 5-yard line. The clock, however, was now working against the Bulldogs; out of timeouts, Stafford lined up for their last play. Senior defensive end Forest Hayden put it to an end by breaking off his coverage, getting to the Bulldogs’ backfield, slowing the ball carrier enough for a swarm of Mountaineers to put an end to this battle and bring the crowd off the edge of their seats. “It was a gut check, that’s all,” Bayer said of the final time out during the last Stafford drive of the game. “When I went out there I told them it was ‘gut check time’ and they responded. They played their hearts out and got a great win.”Jake Sutterlin(24 carries, 174 yards) put the Mountaineers up 6-0 midway through the first quarter on a 55-yard run. The Bulldogs did not answer until 10:31 to go in the second quarter, when Jesse Scroggins darted in from the 15 and converted the extra point to take a 7-6 lead. Neither team could hang on to the ball effectively from this point; three lost fumbles, an interception and a blocked punt kept the score where it was until Sutterlin found the end zone once again. Donyell Williams(12 carries, 41 yards) went in for the two-point conversion and Housy went into the half ahead by seven. Act II of this thriller began with senior back Jake Foley (eight carries, 43 yards) rumbling into the end zone from three yards out. Sutterlin punched in the two-point conversion and the lead was now 14 points. On the ensuing kickoff, the ball failed to travel the required 10 yards; however, the officials on the field said Housy made contact with the ball and the Bulldogs got the ball on the Mountaineers’ 42-yard line.Bulldog back Tim Artruc immediately made Housy pay for the mistake on a bruising 42-yard run, followed with a two-point conversion and the Mountaineer lead was back to seven, where it remained until the final whistle. Bayer attributes a major part of his team’s success to familiarity with their opponents’ double-wing formation. “We got two straight weeks to work on the double-wing since Windsor Locks ran it against us,” Bayer said. “That was a bit of fortunate scheduling for us and we were able to make some adjustments. “We changed up our front a bit and were able to do some things to keep them under control. We really didn’t give up the big play aside from the one run, and that was a big difference in the game.”Defensively, the Mountaineers were led by Williams and sophomore Jeremy Stiewing, who both had interceptions; Hayden and McElhone, each recovering fumbles; and Foley leading the way with 13 tackles.The team record is now 2-0. Next up will be a road test at Canton on Saturday, Oct. 1. Start time is 1 p.m. Tom Brissett is the statistician for the Mountaineers.

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