CATS · 42 minutes ago  · CATS Continued from Page 7A and really rely on the perimeter screen...

1
Friday, October 16, 2020 e Post-Signal 11A Tomcats up next for Tioga The Marketplace — Buy, sell, trade, hire — Call 686-2169 to place your ad, or e-mail your ad to [email protected]. Next deadline for The Marketplace: Oct. 20 @ Noon TexSCAN Week of October 11, 2020 ACREAGE Hunting/investment/recreational property. We have some of the best in Texas! From the Hill Country (Edwards, Menard, Coke, Val Verde County, free ranging exotics) to South Texas (Kinney, Duval, Live Oak County, whitetail, hogs). Large or small acreage. 30-year fixed rate owner financing, only 5% down. Call toll-free or email for individual prices and terms, www.ranchenterprisesltd.com, 800-876-9720. AUCTIONS Halliburton Real Estate Auction – Industrial site sells without reserve! Pampa, TX, 8590 County Road 12 1/2. Industrial site containing 5 Structures with a total of 37,532+/- sf on 41.66 Acres. Auctions: 10 a.m., Thur. Oct. 22, on site or bid live from anywhere at auctionnetwork.com. TX Jeffrey Michael Ashby RE LIC 550021; Thomas E. Barnes III AUC LIC 6457. Call 800-801-8003, williamsauction.com/halliburton. LEGAL ASSISTANCE Elmiron, a drug commonly prescribed for bladder pain, may damage eyes and even cause vision loss. Elmiron has been prescribed to hundreds of thousands of people who suffer from a particular urinary disorder, interstitial cystitis. Call 800-460-0606 for professional legal insight or visit www.RespectForYou.com/eyes. GENERATORS GENERAC Standby Generators. The weather is increasingly unpredictable. Be prepared for power outages. FREE 7-year extended warranty ($695 value!). Schedule your FREE in-home assessment today. Call 1-855-704-8579. Special financing for qualified customers. INTERNET AT&T Internet. Starting at $40/month w/12-mo agmt. Includes 1 TB of data per month. Get More For Your High-Speed Internet Thing. Ask us how to bundle and SAVE! Geo & svc restrictions apply. Call us today 1-855-439-5457. LOG HOMES Log Homes – 4 Log Home kits selling for balance owed, free delivery. Model #101 Carolina, bal. $17,000; Model #203 Georgia, bal. $19,950; Model #305 Biloxi, bal. $14,500; Model #403 Augusta, bal. $16,500. View plans at www.loghomedream.com; 704-602-3035. MAINTENANCE Eliminate gutter cleaning forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debris-blocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today. 15% off and 0% financing for those who qualify. PLUS Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-855-815-5722. MEDICAL Portable Oxygen Concentrator May Be Covered by Medicare! Reclaim independence and mobility with the compact design and long-lasting battery of Inogen One. Free information kit! Call 866-747-9983. Life Alert. One press of a button sends help FAST, 24/7! At home and on the go. Mobile Pendant with GPS. FREE First Aid Kit (with subscription.) CALL 844-831-1525. FREE Brochure. DENTAL INSURANCE from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. Call 1-855-901-0467 for details. www.dental50plus.com/txpress. 6118-0219 WANTED I Buy RVs & Mobile Homes – Travel Trailers, 5th Wheels, Goosenecks, Bumper Pulls. In Any Area, Any Condition – Old/New, Dirty or Clean! I PAY CA$H. No Title – No Problem, we can apply for one. ANR Enterprises, 956-466-7001. Texas Press Statewide Classified Network 273 Participating Texas Newspapers • Regional Ads Start At $250 • Email [email protected] NOTICE: While most advertisers are reputable, we cannot guarantee products or servics advertised. We urge readers to use caution and when in doubt, contact the Texas Attorney General at 800-621-0508 or the Federal Trade Commission at 877-FTC-HELP. The FTC web site is www.ftc.gov/bizop. FOR SALE ___________________ NEW & USED PIPE. 2 3/8 - 2 2/8 - 3 ½ - 4 ½ & other sizes. Square & rectangular tubing. Authorized dealer Flus- che Enterprise, Muen- ster, TX. 940-759-2206 tfc HELP WANTED ___________________ NOW HIRING: Wood Cubicles, of Gunter, Tex- as is looking to hire Cab- inet Makers with a min- imum of 1 year experi- ence. Pay will be based on experience. Apply at 400 West Main, Gunter, Texas. O9-2tp Bookkeeper/Secre- NOTICES ___________________ I BUY gun collections, knives, ammo and mili- tary items. I buy big or small collections. Cash Buyer for anything of value. 940-368-1433. 1tp I BUY gold and silver jewelry. I also buy gold and silver coins, watch- es and broken gold jew- elry. 940-368-1433. 1tp Great Job Opportunities: *Wood Shop Workers *Sales/Estimating Positions *Team Lead Positions *Experience a Plus Positions available in Aubrey & Denton, Pay DOE. Call (940) 442-6550 PUBLIC NOTICES ___________________ PUBLIC NOTICES ___________________ CITY OF KRUGER- VILLE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Krugerville, Texas, will convene for a public hearing on Mon- day, November 2, 2020, at 6:00 pm at Krugerville City Hall, 5097 Hwy 377, S, Krugerville, Texas 76227. (The City Coun- cil is currently acting as P&Z and taking action as Council.) Upon City Council ap- proval of the replat of Lots 3 & 4, in the Lost Creek Land Addition, being 3.57 acres of land situated in the James Bridges Survey, Ab- stract No. 36, record- ed on 4/24/2018 in the plat records of Denton County, Texas, Docu- ment #2018-185, DCAD Properties #731171 & 731170, known as 8700 & 8702 Ike Byrom Rd, and located in the City of Krugerville, Denton County, Texas, and in consideration of the re- quested change, to be finalized as Lot 1, in the Game Seven Addition, the City Councill will conduct a public hearing to receive public com- ment, consider, and dis- cuss a request for a zon- ing change from I (Man- ufacturing/Industrial) and SD1 (Special Dis- trict 1) to SD1 (Special District 1) for the whole of 3.57 acres. Written comments on the request are wel- comed and will be ac- cepted until the time of the public hearing and may be presented at the hearing. Members of the public are invited to at- tend and speak at the hearing. If you have questions, please contact Sandy Frantz, City Secretary, at 940-365-5833, Mon- Thurs from 7 am to 6 pm. O16-1tc Read e Post-Signal FREE for two months! Go to postsignal.com/trial for information. tary. Quickbooks profi- cient with excellent or- ganizational and com- munication skills. Pilot Point. Resume to ster- [email protected]. O16-1tp HELP WANTED ___________________ Please remember to recycle! By JT Strasner General Manager The Tioga Bulldogs (1-6, 0-3) suffered a 61-0 loss at Collinsville last week. The Bulldogs kept the contest close in the early go- ing, trailing 8-0 after the first quarter and 20-0 at halftime. Collinsville ran away with things in the sec- ond half, posting 41 unan- swered points. Freshman Rylan New- man led the Bulldogs with 34 yards on 17 carries. Chase Evans tallied 31 yards. Logan Westbrook and Tanner Binyon each had 22 yards on the ground. Cory Sheppard paced the Pirates with 111 yards and 3 TDs on 7 carries. Quar- terback Luis Hernandez rushed for 60 yards and 2 touchdowns while also throwing for 86 yards and a score. Collinsville had 423 yards of total offense, while Tioga had 111. Defensively, Evans led Tioga with 10 tackles. West- brook added 4 stops, along with a forced fumble and recovery. Canyon Maness posted 7 tackles, while Ca- den Case added 6 stops. Evan Ballinger and Jo- nah Grubbs finished with 5 tackles each. Up next for the Bulldogs will be another district road game, this time at Tom Bean. The Tomcats (1-6, 0-3) have struggled in district action as well this season and are coming off a 65-0 defeat at the hands of pow- erhouse Lindsay last week. Tom Bean defeated Clarks- ville 18-12 in a pre-district contest Week 3. The Tomcats were pre- dicted to finish 5th in the 6-team district in the pre- season. Tom Bean returns 17 starters from a team that finished 4-7 last sea- son. Quarterback Ryan Weems (6-2, 210) leads the Tomcat attack. Tom Bean has a siz- able group of linemen, led by Zach Hunt (6-6, 300), Zane McNealy (6-0, 230) and Angel Ragoza (5-8, 270). CHAPS Continued from Page 7A Whitesboro enters the game with a 1-5 record, but David said that may be misleading. The Grayson County Cats have lost to Gunter and Aubrey in the pre-district and also fell to top league teams Boyd and Brock. “[Whitesboro] is about the best 1-5 team I’ve seen,” David said. “You look at who they’ve played and it’s some really good, ranked teams.” WHS attempts to con- fuse its opponents on of- fense, with a 2-headed quar- terback system featuring junior Jacob Hermes (6-4, 200) and sophomore Mac Harper (6-3, 180). Running back Devon Price (5-9, 160) leads the ground attack. “Offensively, they run about everything in the world,” David said. “No- back, wildcat, option, Spread. You name it. They’ll run a lot of trick plays. Their linemen have good size, and Price, the running back, is a go-getter. Their kids play hard.” Defensively, Whitesboro operates from a 3-4 base. The Bearcats held Boyd to 13 points in the first half before tiring two weeks ago. “They’ll run zone be- hind those linebackers and they’re definitely a bend, don’t break type of team,” David said. “They run to the ball and are good tack- lers. Their kids are focused and locked in.” Pilot Point expects to get some of its players who were unavailable back for the Whitesboro game. Da- kota David will start his third consecutive game at quarterback while Max Hol- lar continues to rest and re- hab a leg injury. “[Dorian] Soroka is day to day,” Coach David said. “[Caleb] Holloway should be back. [Jacob] Scott should be back. Max is proba- bly a week or so away. He’s still pretty ginger on that leg. We don’t want him out there until he’s 100 percent healthy.” With Dakota David play- ing well at quarterback, is there a possibility that Hol- lar could move back to re- ceiver when healthy? “We haven’t really talked a lot about that be- cause Max isn’t close enough to coming back yet,” Coach David said. “Know we know Dakota can do it at quarterback and the kids have confidence in him. Maybe there’s some op- tions there for Max to move around and get more ath- letes on the perimeter. But that will be something to worry about some other week.” With the high school campus being closed to in- person instruction this week, the Cats are practic- ing earlier in the day. “It’s not really a positive or a negative,” Coach Da- vid said. “It’s not as good for the kids, in my opin- ion, because being in that classroom is the best kind of instruction. We get them in and out of the field house as quick as we can so that there’s less chance of spreading something if it’s around. We’re being cau- tious.” CATS Continued from Page 7A and really rely on the perimeter screen game. Their quarterback is very comfort- able back there, and they like to keep teams off balance.” Senior running back Tallyn Wellborn ran for 95 yards and 3 TDs against Vernon and 172 yards and 3 TDs the previous week against Venus. “Wellborn is a big kid, and he runs really physical,” Ivy said. “We’ll have to bring a lot of bodies to slow him down.” Forcing turnovers has been a big key to the Chaps’ success this season, and Ivy said the turnover battle will have to be in Au- brey’s favor in order to win Friday night. “They’re very physical and run to the ball on defense,” Ivy said. “We’ll have to do a great job with ball security. On the other hand, we’ve done a good job in the turnover ratio all year, and we’ll have to get in there and force some more this Friday.” Ivy said the Chaps have done well to put the big win over Celina behind them and are focused on the next opponent. “Our kids have been very business- like,” Ivy said. “We came in Saturday and watched film of the Celina win and had a good time with that. But since then, there’s been little to no talk about Celina. They know Sanger is a big game for us. I like our kids’ maturity level. They know that they can’t live in last week. They also know that this game will be like the Super Bowl for Sanger and that we’ve got to win this one to reach our goal of a district championship. We’ve got to be ready to play.” EFFORT Continued from Page 9A a huge way, espe- cially on short yard- age. They couldn’t handle him.” Celina scored on a drive right before halftime to take a 20-14 lead at the break. The Bobcats took the ball to be- gin halftime, but sacks by Jett Run- ion and Wyatt Dyer limited Celina to a 44-yard missed field goal attempt. Aubrey then moved 57 yards in 6 plays, featuring a 34-yard pass from Holder to Runion, that led to a 23-yard field goal by Bryson Bohannon as the Chaps pulled within 20-17 with 5:52 left in the third quar- ter. The Aubrey de- fense forced Celina into a turnover on downs on the next possession. Two plays later, Cooke scampered 59 yards for a 23-20 lead that the Chaps would not relinquish. Celina was forced to punt, and on the very next play, Col- grove added a 59-yard TD of his own to push AHS ahead 30- 20 entering the final pe- riod. Col- grove’s run was an ath- letic mas- terpiece that saw him hurdle the first Celina de- fender in the back- field before outrac- ing everyone to the end zone. “I was just look- ing for an oppor- tunity to use my speed,” Colgrove said. “They were keying on our full- back, so I took ad- vantage of it. We took this game so seriously, and I’m proud of the way we played.” Celina had one more answer, march- ing 66 yards in 12 plays, trimming the lead to 30-27 with 8:21 to play. Au- brey pad- ded its lead with a 73- yard drive that saw 10 runs and 1 pass, capped by Hill’s third TD of the night, as the Chaps moved ahead 36-27. Celina was forced to turn the ball over on downs, and Holder knelt down the final 2 plays as Aubrey stu- dents in the stands chanted “over- rated” and “nah nah nah nah goodbye” towards the de- flated Celina crowd. “It’s an amaz- ing feeling right now,” Ivy said after the win. “For our kids, for our pro- gram, for our town. [Celina has] always been a hurdle we haven’t been able to get over. Hopefully, this gives us a lot of momentum going forward.” Holder basked in the afterglow of the win. “Beating a team like Celina, his- torically one of the top teams in Texas in all divisions, it gives us so much confidence,” Holder said. “We’re 1-0 in district and just have to stay focused and keep it going.” AUBREY Continued from Page 9A Jaxon Holder yards for a Bearcat touch- down. Joel Gainzer added the PAT as the Cats led 7-0. Paradise then drove the length of the field before the Bearcat defense stopped them on a fourth down play from the 6. The Bearcats then drove down to the Par- adise 17 before Gainzer hit a 27-yard field goal making the score 10-0. With 6:43 left in the half, Valentine ran in a 1-yard TD to make the score 10-7. Pilot Point quickly an- swered as David connected with Aydon Cox on a 46- yard pass play down to the Paradise 15. The offensive line con- sisting of Tincher, Gavin Wheeler, Collin Haynes, Dack Morgan and Aaron Strittmatter then blew open a hole in the Panther de- fense as Ish Harris rolled 15 yards for his first TD of the night to make it 17-7. Paradise managed one last drive set up by a screen pass from Braxton Thom- ason to Tanner York for 47 yards down inside the Bearcat 10. As time expired in the half, Thomason was intercepted in the end zone by Harris. In the second half, the Bearcat offense started to roll as Harris scored on an- other 15-yard TD run with 9:11 left in the third quar- ter to push the Cats ahead 24-7. Paradise quickly re- sponded as Thomason hit Anthony Cardenas on a 55-yard touchdown strike making the score 24-14. Within minutes, Da- kota David connected with Aydon Cox on a 50-yard TD making the score 31-14 with 3:31 left in the third quarter. The Bearcats then added to their point to- tal with 9:32 in the fourth quarter as David hit Avery Smith with a 34-yard TD strike to make it 37-14. Once again Harris found the end zone at 4:20 left in the game on an 8-yard TD run, making the score 44- 14. Paradise’s Valentine then plunged in a 1-yard run with :59 seconds left in the game to make the final score 44-21.

Transcript of CATS · 42 minutes ago  · CATS Continued from Page 7A and really rely on the perimeter screen...

Page 1: CATS · 42 minutes ago  · CATS Continued from Page 7A and really rely on the perimeter screen game. Their quarterback is very comfort-able back there, and they like to keep teams

Friday, October 16, 2020 The Post-Signal 11A

Tomcats up next for Tioga

The Marketplace— Buy, sell, trade, hire —

Call 686-2169 to place your ad, or e-mail your ad to [email protected] deadline for The Marketplace: Oct. 20 @ Noon

TexSCAN Week of October 11, 2020

ACREAGEHunting/investment/recreational property. We have some of the best in Texas! From the Hill Country (Edwards, Menard, Coke, Val Verde County, free ranging exotics) to South Texas (Kinney, Duval, Live Oak County, whitetail, hogs). Large or small acreage. 30-year fixed rate owner financing, only 5% down. Call toll-free or email for individual prices and terms, www.ranchenterprisesltd.com, 800-876-9720.

AUCTIONSHalliburton Real Estate Auction – Industrial site sells without reserve! Pampa, TX, 8590 County Road 12 1/2. Industrial site containing 5 Structures with a total of 37,532+/- sf on 41.66 Acres. Auctions: 10 a.m., Thur. Oct. 22, on site or bid live from anywhere at auctionnetwork.com. TX Jeffrey Michael Ashby RE LIC 550021; Thomas E. Barnes III AUC LIC 6457. Call 800-801-8003, williamsauction.com/halliburton.

LEGAL ASSISTANCEElmiron, a drug commonly prescribed for bladder pain, may damage eyes and even cause vision loss. Elmiron has been prescribed to hundreds of thousands of people who suffer from a particular urinary disorder, interstitial cystitis. Call 800-460-0606 for professional legal insight or visit www.RespectForYou.com/eyes.

GENERATORSGENERAC Standby Generators. The weather is increasingly unpredictable. Be prepared for power outages. FREE 7-year extended warranty ($695 value!). Schedule your FREE in-home assessment today. Call 1-855-704-8579. Special financing for qualified customers.

INTERNETAT&T Internet. Starting at $40/month w/12-mo agmt. Includes 1 TB of data per month. Get More For Your High-Speed Internet Thing. Ask us how to bundle and SAVE! Geo & svc restrictions apply. Call us today 1-855-439-5457.

LOG HOMESLog Homes – 4 Log Home kits selling for balance owed, free delivery. Model #101 Carolina, bal. $17,000; Model #203 Georgia, bal. $19,950; Model #305 Biloxi, bal. $14,500; Model #403 Augusta, bal. $16,500. View plans at www.loghomedream.com; 704-602-3035.

MAINTENANCEEliminate gutter cleaning forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debris-blocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today. 15% off and 0% financing for those who qualify. PLUS Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-855-815-5722.

MEDICALPortable Oxygen Concentrator May Be Covered by Medicare! Reclaim independence and mobility with the compact design and long-lasting battery of Inogen One. Free information kit! Call 866-747-9983.

Life Alert. One press of a button sends help FAST, 24/7! At home and on the go. Mobile Pendant with GPS. FREE First Aid Kit (with subscription.) CALL 844-831-1525. FREE Brochure.

DENTAL INSURANCE from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. Call 1-855-901-0467 for details. www.dental50plus.com/txpress. 6118-0219

WANTED I Buy RVs & Mobile Homes – Travel Trailers, 5th Wheels, Goosenecks, Bumper Pulls. In Any Area, Any Condition – Old/New, Dirty or Clean! I PAY CA$H. No Title – No Problem, we can apply for one. ANR Enterprises, 956-466-7001.

Texas Press Statewide Classified Network 273 Participating Texas Newspapers • Regional Ads

Start At $250 • Email [email protected]: While most advertisers are reputable, we cannot guarantee products or servics advertised. We urge readers to use caution and when in doubt, contact the Texas Attorney General at 800-621-0508 or the Federal Trade Commission at 877-FTC-HELP. The FTC web site is www.ftc.gov/bizop.

FOR SALE___________________

NEW & USED PIPE. 2 3/8 - 2 2/8 - 3 ½ - 4 ½ & other sizes. Square & rectangular tubing.

Authorized dealer Flus-che Enterprise, Muen-ster, TX. 940-759-2206tfc

HELP WANTED___________________

NOW HIRING: Wood Cubicles, of Gunter, Tex-as is looking to hire Cab-inet Makers with a min-imum of 1 year experi-ence. Pay will be based on experience. Apply at 400 West Main, Gunter, Texas.O9-2tp

Bookkeeper/Secre-

NOTICES___________________I BUY gun collections, knives, ammo and mili-tary items. I buy big or small collections. Cash Buyer for anything of value. 940-368-1433.1tp

I BUY gold and silver jewelry. I also buy gold and silver coins, watch-es and broken gold jew-elry. 940-368-1433.1tp

Great Job Opportunities:

*Wood Shop Workers*Sales/Estimating Positions

*Team Lead Positions*Experience a Plus

Positions available

in Aubrey & Denton, Pay DOE. Call (940) 442-6550

PUBLIC NOTICES___________________

PUBLIC NOTICES___________________

CITY OF KRUGER-VILLE

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Krugerville, Texas, will convene for a public hearing on Mon-day, November 2, 2020, at 6:00 pm at Krugerville City Hall, 5097 Hwy 377, S, Krugerville, Texas 76227. (The City Coun-cil is currently acting as P&Z and taking action as Council.)

Upon City Council ap-proval of the replat of Lots 3 & 4, in the Lost Creek Land Addition, being 3.57 acres of land situated in the James Bridges Survey, Ab-stract No. 36, record-ed on 4/24/2018 in the plat records of Denton County, Texas, Docu-ment #2018-185, DCAD Properties #731171 & 731170, known as 8700

& 8702 Ike Byrom Rd, and located in the City of Krugerville, Denton County, Texas, and in consideration of the re-quested change, to be finalized as Lot 1, in the Game Seven Addition, the City Councill will conduct a public hearing to receive public com-ment, consider, and dis-cuss a request for a zon-ing change from I (Man-ufacturing/Industrial) and SD1 (Special Dis-trict 1) to SD1 (Special District 1) for the whole of 3.57 acres.

Written comments on the request are wel-comed and will be ac-cepted until the time of the public hearing and may be presented at the hearing. Members of the public are invited to at-tend and speak at the hearing.

If you have questions, please contact Sandy Frantz, City Secretary, at 940-365-5833, Mon-Thurs from 7 am to 6 pm.O16-1tc

Read The Post-Signal FREE for two months!

Go to postsignal.com/trial for information.

tary. Quickbooks profi-cient with excellent or-ganizational and com-munication skills. Pilot Point. Resume to [email protected]

HELP WANTED___________________

Please remember to recycle!

By JT StrasnerGeneral Manager The Tioga Bulldogs (1-6, 0-3) suffered a 61-0 loss at Collinsville last week. The Bulldogs kept the contest close in the early go-ing, trailing 8-0 after the first quarter and 20-0 at halftime. Collinsville ran away with things in the sec-ond half, posting 41 unan-swered points. Freshman Rylan New-man led the Bulldogs with 34 yards on 17 carries. Chase Evans tallied 31 yards. Logan Westbrook and Tanner Binyon each had 22 yards on the ground. Cory Sheppard paced the Pirates with 111 yards and 3 TDs on 7 carries. Quar-

terback Luis Hernandez rushed for 60 yards and 2 touchdowns while also throwing for 86 yards and a score. Collinsville had 423 yards of total offense, while Tioga had 111. Defensively, Evans led Tioga with 10 tackles. West-brook added 4 stops, along with a forced fumble and recovery. Canyon Maness posted 7 tackles, while Ca-den Case added 6 stops. Evan Ballinger and Jo-nah Grubbs finished with 5 tackles each. Up next for the Bulldogs will be another district road game, this time at Tom Bean. The Tomcats (1-6, 0-3)

have struggled in district action as well this season and are coming off a 65-0 defeat at the hands of pow-erhouse Lindsay last week. Tom Bean defeated Clarks-ville 18-12 in a pre-district contest Week 3. The Tomcats were pre-dicted to finish 5th in the 6-team district in the pre-season. Tom Bean returns 17 starters from a team that finished 4-7 last sea-son. Quarterback Ryan Weems (6-2, 210) leads the Tomcat attack. Tom Bean has a siz-able group of linemen, led by Zach Hunt (6-6, 300), Zane McNealy (6-0, 230) and Angel Ragoza (5-8, 270).

CHAPS Continued from Page 7A

Whitesboro enters the game with a 1-5 record, but David said that may be misleading. The Grayson County Cats have lost to Gunter and Aubrey in the pre-district and also fell to top league teams Boyd and Brock. “[Whitesboro] is about the best 1-5 team I’ve seen,” David said. “You look at who they’ve played and it’s some really good, ranked teams.” WHS attempts to con-fuse its opponents on of-fense, with a 2-headed quar-terback system featuring junior Jacob Hermes (6-4, 200) and sophomore Mac Harper (6-3, 180). Running back Devon Price (5-9, 160) leads the ground attack. “Offensively, they run about everything in the world,” David said. “No-back, wildcat, option, Spread. You name it. They’ll run a lot of trick plays. Their linemen have good size, and Price, the running back, is a go-getter. Their kids play hard.” Defensively, Whitesboro

operates from a 3-4 base. The Bearcats held Boyd to 13 points in the first half before tiring two weeks ago. “They’ll run zone be-hind those linebackers and they’re definitely a bend, don’t break type of team,” David said. “They run to the ball and are good tack-lers. Their kids are focused and locked in.” Pilot Point expects to get some of its players who were unavailable back for the Whitesboro game. Da-kota David will start his third consecutive game at quarterback while Max Hol-lar continues to rest and re-hab a leg injury. “[Dorian] Soroka is day to day,” Coach David said. “[Caleb] Holloway should be back. [Jacob] Scott should be back. Max is proba-bly a week or so away. He’s still pretty ginger on that leg. We don’t want him out there until he’s 100 percent healthy.” With Dakota David play-ing well at quarterback, is there a possibility that Hol-lar could move back to re-

ceiver when healthy? “We haven’t really talked a lot about that be-cause Max isn’t close enough to coming back yet,” Coach David said. “Know we know Dakota can do it at quarterback and the kids have confidence in him. Maybe there’s some op-tions there for Max to move around and get more ath-letes on the perimeter. But that will be something to worry about some other week.” With the high school campus being closed to in-person instruction this week, the Cats are practic-ing earlier in the day. “It’s not really a positive or a negative,” Coach Da-vid said. “It’s not as good for the kids, in my opin-ion, because being in that classroom is the best kind of instruction. We get them in and out of the field house as quick as we can so that there’s less chance of spreading something if it’s around. We’re being cau-tious.”

CATS Continued from Page 7A

and really rely on the perimeter screen game. Their quarterback is very comfort-able back there, and they like to keep teams off balance.” Senior running back Tallyn Wellborn ran for 95 yards and 3 TDs against Vernon and 172 yards and 3 TDs the previous week against Venus. “Wellborn is a big kid, and he runs really physical,” Ivy said. “We’ll have to bring a lot of bodies to slow him down.” Forcing turnovers has been a big key to the Chaps’ success this season, and Ivy said the turnover battle will have to be in Au-brey’s favor in order to win Friday night. “They’re very physical and run to the ball on defense,” Ivy said. “We’ll have to do a great job with ball security. On the other

hand, we’ve done a good job in the turnover ratio all year, and we’ll have to get in there and force some more this Friday.” Ivy said the Chaps have done well to put the big win over Celina behind them and are focused on the next opponent. “Our kids have been very business-like,” Ivy said. “We came in Saturday and watched film of the Celina win and had a good time with that. But since then, there’s been little to no talk about Celina. They know Sanger is a big game for us. I like our kids’ maturity level. They know that they can’t live in last week. They also know that this game will be like the Super Bowl for Sanger and that we’ve got to win this one to reach our goal of a district championship. We’ve got to be ready to play.”

EFFORT Continued from Page 9A

a huge way, espe-cially on short yard-age. They couldn’t handle him.” Celina scored on a drive right before halftime to take a 20-14 lead at the break. The Bobcats took the ball to be-gin halftime, but sacks by Jett Run-ion and Wyatt Dyer limited Celina to a 44-yard missed field goal attempt. Aubrey then moved 57 yards in 6 plays, featuring a 34-yard pass from Holder to Runion, that led to a 23-yard field goal by Bryson Bohannon as the Chaps pulled within 20-17 with 5:52 left in the third quar-ter. The Aubrey de-fense forced Celina into a turnover on downs on the next possession. Two

plays later, Cooke scampered 59 yards for a 23-20 lead that the Chaps would not relinquish. Celina was forced to punt, and on the very next play, Col-grove added a 59-yard TD of his own to push AHS ahead 30-20 entering the final pe-riod. Col-grove’s run was an ath-letic mas-terpiece that saw him hurdle the first Celina de-fender in the back-field before outrac-ing everyone to the end zone. “I was just look-ing for an oppor-tunity to use my speed,” Colgrove said. “They were keying on our full-

back, so I took ad-vantage of it. We took this game so seriously, and I’m proud of the way we played.” Celina had one more answer, march-

ing 66 yards in 12 plays, trimming the lead to 30-27 with 8:21 to play. Au-brey pad-ded its lead with a 73-yard drive

that saw 10 runs and 1 pass, capped by Hill’s third TD of the night, as the Chaps moved ahead 36-27. Celina was forced to turn the ball over on downs, and Holder knelt down the final 2 plays as Aubrey stu-dents in the stands

chanted “over-rated” and “nah nah nah nah goodbye” towards the de-flated Celina crowd. “It’s an amaz-ing feeling right now,” Ivy said after the win. “For our kids, for our pro-gram, for our town. [Celina has] always been a hurdle we haven’t been able to get over. Hopefully, this gives us a lot of momentum going forward.” Holder basked in the afterglow of the win. “Beating a team like Celina, his-torically one of the top teams in Texas in all divisions, it gives us so much confidence,” Holder said. “We’re 1-0 in district and just have to stay focused and keep it going.”

AUBREY Continued from Page 9A

Jaxon Holder

yards for a Bearcat touch-down. Joel Gainzer added the PAT as the Cats led 7-0. Paradise then drove the length of the field before the Bearcat defense stopped them on a fourth down play from the 6. The Bearcats then drove down to the Par-adise 17 before Gainzer hit a 27-yard field goal making the score 10-0. With 6:43 left in the half, Valentine ran in a 1-yard TD to make the score 10-7. Pilot Point quickly an-swered as David connected with Aydon Cox on a 46-yard pass play down to the Paradise 15. The offensive line con-sisting of Tincher, Gavin Wheeler, Collin Haynes,

Dack Morgan and Aaron Strittmatter then blew open a hole in the Panther de-fense as Ish Harris rolled 15 yards for his first TD of the night to make it 17-7. Paradise managed one last drive set up by a screen pass from Braxton Thom-ason to Tanner York for 47 yards down inside the Bearcat 10. As time expired in the half, Thomason was intercepted in the end zone by Harris. In the second half, the Bearcat offense started to roll as Harris scored on an-other 15-yard TD run with 9:11 left in the third quar-ter to push the Cats ahead 24-7. Paradise quickly re-sponded as Thomason hit

Anthony Cardenas on a 55-yard touchdown strike making the score 24-14. Within minutes, Da-kota David connected with Aydon Cox on a 50-yard TD making the score 31-14 with 3:31 left in the third quarter. The Bearcats then added to their point to-tal with 9:32 in the fourth quarter as David hit Avery Smith with a 34-yard TD strike to make it 37-14. Once again Harris found the end zone at 4:20 left in the game on an 8-yard TD run, making the score 44-14. Paradise’s Valentine then plunged in a 1-yard run with :59 seconds left in the game to make the final score 44-21.