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Mikes blank Mapletown, 35-0

By Jacob Meyer, For The Greene County Messenger 5 min read
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Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ

Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ Carmichaels’ Cody Brown (14) leaps over MapletownĢƵ fallen Brandon Donley (4) in the Mikes’ 35-0 Tri-County South Conference rout of the Maples on Friday night.

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Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ

Carmichaels’ Dylan Wilson carries the ball after recovering a Mapletown fumble in the Mikes’ 35-0 victory in Tri-County South action on Sept. 30. The Mikes host Fort Cherry tonight in a game that will decide first place in the conference.

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Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ

Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ Carmichaels players raise their helmets to celebrate a 35-0 win over Mapletown Friday night after shaving their heads earlier in the afternoon to support 10-year-old Braedyn Wasko, who is battling cancer. While most teams usually depend on one or two players for the bulk of their scoring, the Mikes got points from seven different players against the Maples.

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Carmichaels' Dylan Wilson (27) carries in the ball into the end for a receiving touchdown in the Mighty Mikes' 35-0 win over Mapletown on Friday night.

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Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ

MapletownĢƵ Dylan Rush (9) finds very little room to run against Carmichaels’ Jacob Turner (78) and the Mikes defense during their Tri-County South Conference game at Carmichaels, Sept. 30. The Mikes kept Rush, the leading scorer in the area, out of the end zone in earning a 35-0 win. Carmichaels defense will face an even stiffer test tonight when they host unbeaten Fort Cherry in a game that will decide the conference champion. (Photo by Kelly Tunney)

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Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ

MapletownĢƵ Gavin Uphold (31) leads the way for Dylan Rush (9) as he carries the ball for the Maples in their 35-0 loss to the Carmichaels Mighty Mikes on Friday night.

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Carmichaels' Cody Brown (14) leaps to catch a 2-point conversion on Friday night to help the Mighty Mikes toward their 35-0 victory against the Mapletown Maples on Friday night.

CARMICHAELS — Before the start of the Tri-County South Conference match-up between Carmichaels and Mapletown, the captains for the Mighty Mikes went out for the coin toss without their helmets. They wanted everybody to see their bald heads.

Earlier in the day, all 41 members of the Carmichaels football team, as well as several coaches and community members, shaved their heads in support of a local 10-year-old with cancer at a fundraiser held at the same place the Mikes would defeat the Maples later that day.

Three days before his 10th birthday, Braedyn Wasko was diagnosed with EwingĢƵ Sarcoma, a cancer that accounts for one percent of childhood cancers. BraedynĢƵ mother, Carla Hughes, said her son was most worried about losing his hair from his chemotherapy treatments, which led to the fundraiser.

With shaved heads, Carmichaels (4-1, 4-0) defeated Mapletown 35-0, scoring all 35 points in the first half.

“The event today was really special to be a part of,” said Carmichaels head coach Ryan Krull, who had his eyebrows shaved as well in support of Braedyn.

“Proud would be the first word that comes to mind. Proud of Braedyn Wasko, the young man who is battling EwingĢƵ Sarcoma, with just the outlook he has in fighting this thing has taught us all something. I’m proud of our players as well. To have (our) guys to understand we’re doing something for a greater cause, it gives me chills.”

At the fundraiser, sophomore offensive lineman Jacob Turner was emotional after the team shaved their heads.

“ItĢƵ just tough seeing that heĢƵ 10 years old and he has to go through this. He got dealt a bad hand,” Turner said. “HeĢƵ 10 years old and he shouldn’t be going through this, so we’re all going to go through it with him.”

Turner is a member of the large Carmichaels defensive line that helped hold junior Mapletown running back Dylan Rush under wraps, holding him to 98 yards on 25 carries on the night.

Rush came into the game 274 yards away from eclipsing 4,000 in his career, which is now down to 176 yards.

“We challenged our guys defensively,” Krull said. “HeĢƵ a good back, and we communicated with them that we’re going to have to do certain things in order to contain him.”

On the other side of the ball, Mapletown head coach George Messich said the size of Carmichaels’ offensive line is the reason the Mikes were able to run for 253 yards on 37 carries, with 218 of those yards coming in the first half.

“They’re huge up front. And they’re not just big kids; they come off the ball, as a group, as hard as any anyone I’ve seen in a long time,” Messich said, whose Maples are 2-2 in the conference and 3-3 overall. “It was such a mismatch size-wise, and I knew we were going to have a hard time stopping them, if we could stop them. Their size and power really showed off tonight.”

The Mikes (4-0, 4-1) drove the ball downfield in six plays to start the game, scoring on a 3-yard run from junior running back to put Carmichaels ahead 7-0 not even three minutes into the game.

Four minutes later, the Mikes would increase their lead to 14 points when junior wide receiver Chad Ruse would score from nine yards out.

Another Mapletown three-and-out gave the ball back to the Carmichaels offensive quickly. On the first play of the next drive, senior quarterback Jonathan Christopher faked a screen and connected with senior wide receiver Garrett Ponick on a wide open deep pass for a 61-yard score.

“When you go ahead and put eight guys in the box or nine guys in the box and you have matchups on the outside, man-to-man, we try to take advantage of that at times,” Krull said. “ItĢƵ just been part of the gameplan from the get-go. We have opened it up a little bit more as the weeks have gone on, and hopefully we can do that in the future.”

With 17 seconds left in the first quarter, sophomore running back Joey Minor scored from 19 yards out to put the Mikes ahead 27-0. Minor, the starting tailback for the Mikes with junior Nick Mundell out with an injury, ran for 122 yards on 11 carries.

“We call Joey ‘Crazy Legs.’ He gets those legs going,” Krull said. “Sometimes heĢƵ not as patient as we want him to be, but I thought he did a good job. He runs hard; he finishes runs, and he generally falls forward to get that extra yard. I’m proud of the way heĢƵ running the football.”

In the second quarter, Christopher connected with freshman wide receiver Dylan Wilson from 18 yards out. A two-point conversion pass from Christopher to senior wide receiver Cody Brown put the Mikes ahead 35-0.

Messich said Carmichaels proved to be “the top team in the conference” in his mind.

“They’re a very good football team, and I think they can do well the rest of this regular season and I wouldn’t be surprised to see them win a game or two in the playoffs.”

Mapletown hosts Jefferson-Morgan next week, while Carmichaels welcomes California. Both games are set to start at 7 p.m.

Tri-County South Conference

Mapletown     0-0-0-0 — 0

Carmichaels 27-8-0-0 — 35

First Quarter

CAR: Brennen Pelzer 3 run (Hunter Davis kick), 9:33

CAR: Chad Ruse 9 run (Davis kick), 5:38

CAR: Garrett Ponick 61 pass from Jonathan Christopher (kick failed), 3:51

CAR: Joey Minor 19 run (Davis kick), 0:17

Second Quarter

CAR: Dylan Wilson 18 pass from Christopher (Cody Brown pass from Christopher), 1:23

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