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Highlights of No. 12 St. Joseph's Prep's (PA) 34-30 win over No. 16 St. John's (DC).
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St. Joe’s Prep downs nationally ranked No. 4 St. John’s College (D.C.) 34-30
From Eastern PA Football
PISCATAWAY,
NJ —Tim Roken tucked the ball nonchalantly under his arm and politely
shook the hands of all the well-wishers that were coming at him from
every direction Friday night at Rutgers’ SHI Stadium.
Not too far away stood Hawks’ junior
receiver Malik Cooper, who was smiling and posing for shots with
teammates and coaches, basking in this new feeling of being a Friday
night hero.
Both Roken and Cooper are in new roles
this season, with Roken being the new head coach at St. Joe’s Prep and
Cooper playing receiver for the first time.
The guys in their new roles got the Hawks back to an old role, winning.
Thanks to a career-high five catches for
157 yards and two TDs from Cooper and some bold moves from Roken,
pulled off an upset in beating St. John’s College. St. John’s is ranked
No. 4 nationally by USA Today and MaxPreps, 34-30.
It marked Roken’s first victory as a head coach and introduced Cooper to a host of national scouts that were watching the game.
The Hawks are now 1-1 with another national powerhouse on the slate next week in visiting IMG.
“It was a great team win,” Roken said.
“Our coaches and our players obviously had a tough defeat last week in
Georgia. But they came back and drew a line in the sand on Monday
morning at 6 a.m. They didn’t want to feel that away again.
“You learn by those things. We had our
backs against the wall a few tines tonight and we came back and won.
This team fights. They fight. These are great programs and to play in
this atmosphere is awesome. Our guys buckled down when we needed to.
These guys fight.”
Junior defensive back Dave Watson
stripped and recovered a fumble by LSU-bound St. John’s receiver Rakim
Jarrett, with just over three minutes to play at the Prep 33. From
there, the Hawks ran out the clock to preserve the win.
For Cooper, it was a combination of elation, mixed with a little reprieve.
Cooper’s 38-yard TD reception with 1:51
left in the third quarter proved to be the winning points. He also
caught a 74-yard TD pass at the start of the game. But what gnawed at
him, and what almost backfired on the Hawks, was an option pass Cooper
made down field that was intercepted early in the third quarter and Prep
up, 24-7.
The Cadets took control and reeled off
20 unanswered points in three minutes, six seconds. The Prep offense
struggled to get across midfield.
Cooper, needless to say, was kicking himself after the interception.
“I was kicking myself, but I had to take
that off my mind, because that pass was definitely on my mind,” Cooper
said. “We beat ourselves against Marietta last week, so we had to
retaliate and come back to get that ‘W.’”
Kyle McCord completed 17 of 35 passes
for 283 yards and three touchdowns, two to Cooper and one to Marvin
Harrison Jr. McCord, like the rest of the Hawks, dealt with a certain
level of frustration from the 21-17 season-opening loss to Marietta.
“We learned from it,” McCord said. “This
was an emotional win against a great team. That means a lot for us, and
it’s the brand of football we like to play. Last week we didn’t live up
to the standard, and this week we got back on track.
“Overall, it was the little things,
alignment, staying on sides, finishing your job. I’ll admit, I messed up
last week. We paid attention to detail and it showed. This showed we’re
resilient to come back from behind.”
This looked like a blowout early.
The Hawks bolted out to a surprising 21-0 first-quarter lead and held a 24-7 advantage at halftime.
By then, McCord had thrown for 195
yards, completing 12 of 25, with two touchdowns and one interception,
which led to the Cadets’ lone halftime score.
After one quarter, the Hawks were
totally dominant. They had outgained St. John’s College 161 to 16 in
total yards, and held the Cadets without a first down throughout the
quarter. St. John’s College didn’t get its initial first down of the
game until there was 8:22 left in the half.
Jarrett was held to two receptions for a total of 16 yards.
St. Joe’s opened the scoring on its
first possession when McCord hit Cooper in stride for a 74-yard
touchdown. It was a perfect connection and further proof why numerous
major programs liked Ohio State-commit McCord. The ball seemed to wait
in the air for Cooper to run under it and take off.
Cooper, meanwhile, had a career-best
game by halftime, catching three passes for 113 yards, the bulk of which
came on the 74-yard TD.
Prep’s defense, which held the Cadets to
129 yards of offense and four first downs in the half, put the Hawks up
14-0 when a botched handoff was fumbled in the end zone and recovered
by Prep’s Blake Romano in the end zone.
The Hawks closed the quarter when McCord
hit an open Marvin Harrison Jr. alone in the corner of the end zone
with a five-yard TD with 1:06 left in the quarter.
The only mistake the Hawks made in the
half when Jamell Overton picked off a McCord pass at the Prep 36. Seven
plays later, Cadets’ senior quarterback Sol-Jay Maiava fooled everyone
and ran in for a seven-yard score with 8:22 left in the half.
The Hawks replied with a 14-play, 80-yard drive that resulted in an Antonio Chadha 29-yard field goal.
What can’t get lost here is the amazing
job St. Joe’s Prep sophomore Keenan Nelson Jr. did on Jarrett, a major
talent, throughout the game. The 6-foot, 180-pound defensive back has
received college offers. After Friday night’s victory, more will
certainly be pouring in.
Summary
St. John’s College-0-7-20-3-30
St. Joe’s Prep-21-3-7-3-34
First Quarter
SJP: Malik Cooper 74 pass from Kyle McCord (Antonio Chadha kick), 11:26
SJP: Blake Romano fumble recovery in the end zone (Chadha kick), 6:25
SJP: Marvin Harrison Jr. 5 pass from McCord (Chadha kick), 1:06
Second Quarter
SJC: Sol-Jay Maiava 7 run (Daniel Reyes kick), 8:22
SJP: Chadha 29 FG, 4:20
Third Quarter
SJC: Colby McDonald 5 run (Reyes kick), 5:48
SJC: Rakim Jarrett 39 pass from Maiava (Reyes kick), 4:19
SJC: Antwain Littleton 37 run (kick failed), 2:41
SJP: Cooper 38 pass from McCord (Chadha kick), 1:51
Fourth Quarter
SJC: Reyes 21 FG, 8:20
SJP: Chadha 39 FG, 3:15
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