Despite loss, this Frazier squad earns elite status
ELIZABETH — The loss stung. The season was over.
The Frazier Commodores had just fallen to the mighty Clairton Bears in the WPIAL Class A semifinals, 56-15, on Friday night and coach Mike Steeber had one last huddle with his squad before letting them leave the field for the final time this year.
“This one hurts right now,” Steeber said. “I feel for them.”
Coming one win short of playing at Heinz Field can do that to a team.
But when the Commodores eventually get over the loss to the Bears, one fact should become clear to them.
They stamped themselves as one of the greatest Frazier football teams ever.
Which edition is the best of all time is always debatable, but how can you not include the 2015 Commodores in that conversation?
They loosened Beth-CenterĢƵ stranglehold on the Tri-County South by soundly defeating the Bulldogs on their own field, and claimed a conference title during an undefeated regular season.
They showed the resolve of a champion with two courageous, determined, come-from-behind WPIAL playoff victories to reach the final four.
Their quick, swarming, hard-hitting defense gave up the fewest points in all of Class A during the regular season, then sparkled in the postseason as well.
They finished 11-1 with their only loss coming against the top-ranked team in the state.
Sounds like a pretty strong resume to me.
Steeber balked a bit when asked to compare his team to other top Frazier squads.
“There were some good ones,” Steeber said. “There were some in the early 80s, I was a young kid at that time, but I heard some pretty good things.”
Pressed a bit, though, Steeber relented and admitted his current squad had earned the right to be included in that discussion.
“I don’t see how you couldn’t, really,” Steeber said. “With the defense they played all year … and the semifinals is very nice.”
Even in the lopsided loss to a Bears team that featured as many as five Division-I recruits, Frazier showed its character. The Commodores battled and defiantly refused to back down even when the score was hopelessly out of hand.
“ThereĢƵ a lot of fight in them, a lot of pride in them,” Steeber said. “ThatĢƵ what got them here, to this point. ThatĢƵ something that I think our team does pride themselves on. Every play is a play and you play that play, no matter what the scoreboard says.”
The Commodores’ defense played its heart out to try to keep Frazier in the game, and it did such a good job of shutting down ClairtonĢƵ vaunted running game that the Bears kept going to the air long after outcome was decided.
Clairton sports a pair of 1,000-yard rushers, but its best back, Lamont Wade, could muster only a team-high 44 yards in 13 carries for just 3.3 yards per pop.
That prompted Clairton coach Wayne Wade Jr. to say, “We’ve got to clean up some of our run-blocking stuff.”
It wasn’t his teamĢƵ run-blocking. No team was able to run effectively against this Frazier squad. Not even the Bears when they held a huge lead.
Frazier also forced three turnovers with Damon Lovis recovering a pair of fumbles and Cameron Roebuck intercepting a pass.
FrazierĢƵ offense finally met its match against the Bears, but, with dual-threat quarterback Hunter Patterson and strong-armed Chris Pierce leading the way, the Commodores were a highlight reel group most of the season, one that could score at any time from any point on the field.
The offense had to claw for everything it got on Friday. Patterson bulled his way to another touchdown, Caleb Cox made a diving run into the end zone for a two-point conversion. Even in the final seconds, SteeberĢƵ boys wouldn’t give up, as Cox threw a 40-yard TD pass to Lovis off a reverse for one last score.
“Our guys don’t quit,” Steeber said. “I’m as proud now as I was last week. This night didn’t turn out the way we wanted it, but their effort was still tremendous till the end.”
It seems the success of this Commodores team didn’t go unnoticed as a huge throng of Frazier fans were on hand at Elizabeth ForwardĢƵ Warrior Stadium.
“What a crowd,” Steeber said. “What support from the community. ItĢƵ really nice to walk into this stadium and hear them and see so much red and white.”
Their team may have lost but those faithful fans got to witness the final game of a truly elite team.
One that has to go down as among the best in Frazier football history.
Rob Burchianti can be reached at rburchianti@heraldstandard.com. Follow him on Twitter (@rvburch).