…South Hills looking to bounce back

Monrovia and South Hills high schools are in unfamiliar territory heading into tonight’s football showdown at Covina District Field. The programs have established themselves as area powers, but each enters tonight’s game with a 1-2 record and some regret to go with it.

“I would imagine you’ll see two angry football teams,” Monrovia coach Ryan Maddox said.

Indeed. Monrovia comes in off a 35-34 overtime loss to San Dimas in which the Wildcats blew a big fourth- quarter lead against a Saints team they’d been waiting the whole offseason to get revenge against after losing to it in last year’s Mid-Valley Division championship.

For South Hills, there was no lead to blow in last week’s loss to Tesoro. The Huskies saw a close game turn into a 10-point deficit just before halftime before things really snowballed in the second half of a 59-6 loss.

“It was two different halves of football,” Huskies coach Steve Bogan said. “We played a great first half, but then we got worn out in the second half. That’s part of the deal when you play up, school-size wise. We just have to keep improving every week.”

Neither coach is convinced the other team’s record is indicative of how good they truly are. For Monrovia, South Hills is another stop in a string of tough nonleague opponents set up by Maddox, who wanted to challenge his team before league started.

“They’re a good football team,” Bogan said of Monrovia. “Turnovers killed them against Glendora and against San Dimas; I think they just turned it down a knob. This team could very easily be undefeated.”

In addition to Tesoro, South Hills has faced one of the best West Covina teams in years and Baldwin Park. The Braves account for the Huskies’ only win, and Maddox doesn’t want to be their second victim.

“They’re just a good football team who has played some good football teams,” Maddox said of South Hills. “They’re huge up front. That’s what really stands out to me.”

If South Hills wants to stifle Monrovia, it will have to find a way to slow down quarterback Nick Bueno, who’s dangerous with his feet and arm.

Bogan said limiting Bueno’s big plays will be critical for his defense, which starts three sophomore linebackers.

“You can’t let him get in space, but that’s easier said than done,” Bogan said about Bueno. “Mobile quarterbacks are definitely a problem – ask Pete Carroll. They’re unique people. You don’t stop them, you contain them. If we can do that, we’ll be in a good place.”

South Hills’ offense also has proven effective on the ground and is led by running backs Jamel Hart and Jordan Gutierrez. Hart has 276 yards and three touchdowns while Gutierrez has 260 yards and one score.

Given the past success of both programs, being 1-2 is a major disappointment and going 1-3 would be unthinkable, but neither coach would go so far as to call today’s game a must-win. Whichever team shakes off last week’s setback quicker may find itself in position to even its record and finish nonleague the following week with a chance at a winning record.

“Kids are resilient,” Maddox said.

As for the Huskies, well, don’t expect them to be taking Monrovia lightly.

Read More: Aram Tolegian – http://www.sgvtribune.com/southhillshighpreps/ci_16212269

Tesoro routs South Hills, 59-6

South Hills ventured deep into Orange County on Friday night and the results were not pretty, with Tesoro (3-1) routing the Huskies (1-2), 59-6.

Matt Adam’s 17-yard touchdown pass to Tanner Lancona with 33 seconds left in the first half gave the Titans a 16-6 lead.

Unfortunately for South Hills, the second half was anything but competitive.

Tesoro dismantled the Huskies by outscoring them 43-0 in the final two quarters.

Adam led the Titans by completing 12 of 16 passes for 202 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

Tesoro was balanced offensively while rushing for 201 yards.

The Huskies got off to a poor start when punter Vincent Hernandez fumbled a snap in his own end zone that resulted in a safety.

That was followed by Andrew Facon’s 74-yard kickoff return to give the Titans an 8-0 lead less than three minutes into the game.

South Hills, however, kept its composure and, after an 83-yard touchdown pass from Hernandez to Cody Deen with 1:58 to go in the first half, the Huskies trailed only 8-6.

The Titans answered with Lancona’s first of two touchdown receptions.

Read more: Richard Hernandez – http://www.sgvtribune.com/preps/ci_16170726#ixzz10aiqtziR

West Covina continues resurgence with 42-27 victory over South Hills

There were those who believed after West Covina High School opened the season with a loss to Covina that the Bulldogs might be a tad overrated.

The Bulldogs showed rival South Hills on Thursday night they are indeed as good as advertised.

Senior B.J. Lee rushed for 125 yards and three touchdowns on just seven carries and West Covina made its loss to Covina a distant memory by taking apart the Huskies 42-27 in a nonleague game at Covina District Field.

The Bulldogs, who rebounded from their loss to Covina with a 35-21 victory over Venice last week, rushed for 340 yards to improve to 2-1.

Junior Jamel Hart rushed for 132 yards and accounted for three scores for the Huskies, who slipped to 1-1.

“I think the kids might have believed what they read in the newspapers,” West Covina coach Mike Maggiore said of his team’s loss to Covina. “Some of our kids played like we just needed to show up. But as much as the Covina game hurt, I think it did us some good.

“The thing for us is we just want to improve and get better each week.”

The Bulldogs made it known early by taking a quick 14-7 lead a minute into the second quarter.

Lee, who was one of the top sprinters in California this past spring, showed off his speed with a pair of 20-yard runs, the second following a 59-yard run by Hart that tied the score 7-7 with 3:16 left in the first quarter.

But the Huskies couldn’t contain West Covina. The Bulldogs, who scored on their first six possessions, took a 21-7 lead when Jimmy Frazier (7 for 82, two touchdowns) followed a South Hills punt with a 45-yard run on the second play of the second quarter.

“They’re good,” South Hills coach Steve Bogan said. “They did a great job. They have a lot of athletes and played very well.

“I think we’re a lot better than we showed. Defensively, I thought it would be a very difficult night and it was.”

The Huskies, though, still were in it late in the first half. South Hills, behind some big runs from Hart and Jordan Gutierrez, had a shot to trail by just a score at the half.

The Huskies drove to the West Covina 24. But runs by Hart and quarterback Vincent Hernandez lost three yards to the 27 before West Covina’s Anthony Molina made a diving interception at the 4-yard line to keep it 21-7 at halftime.

The Bulldogs then added to the Huskies’ frustration by opening the third quarter with a 56-yard drive, taking a 28-7 lead on a 9-yard run by Frazier with 6:52 left in the quarter.

“That was a big momentum switch,” Maggiore said. “It looked like they were going to go in and score. We stop them, which gave us a lot of momentum coming out of the half, and then we follow it up with a score.”

Lee, after South Hills made it 28-14, all but sealed it on West Covina’s next possession. He swept right before cutting back up the middle for a 66-yard scoring run to make it 34-14 with 4:08 left in the quarter.

“He’s not just a kid with a lot of speed,” Maggiore said. “He was able to break some tackles. He runs hard.”

West Covina’s Charles Tucker had a 12-yard run early in the fourth quarter to make it 42-14 before the Huskies scored concession touchdowns on a 1-yard run by Hernandez and a 4-yard run by Hart to account for the 42-27 final.

“It’s a little surprising,” Maggiore said. “But it’s like I told the guys, it’s just about competing and developing.”

Read more: Fred Robledo – http://www.sgvtribune.com/preps/ci_16099605#ixzz0zncdPGzc