Leopards’ loss to Quips ‘devastating’
Belle Vernon did plenty of good things early in the game and again late, but Aliquippa dominated the middle and that carried the Quips to a 33-25 victory over the Leopards in a WPIAL Class 4A semifinal game Friday night.
Top-seeded Aliquippa (9-0) wiped away a 13-point second-quarter deficit by scoring 26 unanswered points. The Quips will play second-seeded Thomas Jefferson in the WPIAL title game next Saturday. Thomas Jefferson held off Plum, 20-17, in the other semifinal.
It will be AliquippaĢƵ 13th consecutive appearance in the WPIAL finals.
The fourth-seeded Leopards were seeking a second straight trip to the championship game and coach Matt Humbert was confident his team could get back there and win it.
“We felt great going in,” Humbert said. “Even with losing our starting free safety and tailback, we still felt we were on really good footing.
“The best way to catalog the loss was that it was devastating to us because we did feel this was our year. We wanted to get back in that game (WPIAL final) and to play TJ again. I felt terrible for our kids and our coaches.”
Belle Vernon (6-2) started quickly, scoring on the gameĢƵ second offensive play, and leading 13-0 in the first quarter and 19-7 in the second quarter.
“We scored twice right off the bat, and then we had a wide open receiver and didn’t complete that pass,” Humbert said. “That would’ve put us up right there with 19-20 points and maybe the outcome would’ve been different.”
Two short touchdown runs by Karl McBride, one set up by Belle Vernon quarterback Devon WhitlockĢƵ fumble, gave Aliquippa a 20-19 halftime lead.
“Devin is what makes the machine roll, we wouldn’t be here without him,” Humbert said. “He had a nice little run for a first down and he got wrapped up and fumbled, and they scored off that.
“The key was us making mistakes. We made mistakes in the kicking game, we made mistakes defensively, we made mistakes offensively. I’m to blame, too. I wear this loss as much as anybody does.
“I’m not trying to downplay Aliquippa. The idea that they’re a Single-A team, you can throw that out the window because they’re a solid football program and anyone who knows anything about high school football around here realizes that.”
Vaughn Morris passed 26 yards to Dorius Moreland to make it 27-19 in the third quarter. Morris completed 13-of-27 passes for 214 yards.
Humbert tipped his hat to AliquippaĢƵ coaching staff.
“They like to run the ball with the tight ends-fullback set. We felt like we really matched up well against that,” Humbert said. “Then they came out in two-by-two and spread and threw the ball a majority of the time. We knew they could throw, but we weren’t expecting that was going to be their game plan.
“Kudos for them for realizing they probably would’ve had a hard time running the ball on us and deviating from that.”
Vernon Redd bolted 17 yards off left tackle in the fourth quarter to give the Quips a 33-19 advantage with 6:27 remaining.
Whitlock, who scored three touchdowns, rambled 39 yards for a score that pulled the Leopards to within 33-25 with 4:32 remaining. Aliquippa, however, was able to run out the clock.
Belle Vernon took a 6-0 lead only two plays into the game when freshman Quinton Martin raced 47 yards for a touchdown. Martin also had two interceptions on defense.
Whitlock gave Belle Vernon a 13-0 lead when he returned an Aliquippa punt 64 yards for a touchdown with 2:53 left in the first quarter. Whitlock finished with 151 yards rushing on 24 carries.
Aliquippa finally scored when Morris scrambled 12 yards for a touchdown in the first minute of the second quarter.
After the ensuing kickoff, Whitlock bolted 76 yards to the Aliquippa 3-yard line. He scored on the next play to give the Leopards a 19-7 lead, but Belle Vernon would not score again for more than 30 minutes of game time as turnovers proved costly.
McBride put the Quips in front with TD runs of two and three yards.
Belle Vernon blocked an Aliquippa punt in the third quarter and Martin returned his second interception to the Quips’ 40 early in the fourth quarter. However, the Leopards were unable to convert either of those big plays into points.
“We didn’t take advantage of opportunities,” Humbert said. “We were able to get three turnovers. It really came down to we didn’t score one touchdown off those turnovers.”
While Belle Vernon proved it was on a par with the Quips, that didn’t make the result any easier for Humbert and his squad to swallow.
“This is one of the toughest losses that I, personally, have had to deal with because I was just so confident in our kids,” Humbert said. “That game could’ve went either way and when you lose a close one like that … thatĢƵ a tough one to deal with.”
It was HumbertĢƵ and his players’ first trip to Carl A. Aschman Stadium, a grass field known affectionately as “The Pit.”
“The field conditions weren’t great, but they weren’t terrible,” Humbert said. “It was worth being able to play in that type of atmosphere. The best way to explain it is itĢƵ like if you walked back into 1920. I don’t mean that in a negative way at all. It was cool. It was awesome. I felt the kids really enjoyed playing there.”
Although heĢƵ reluctant to turn the page, Humbert did admit the Leopards’ program is on stable ground and has high hopes again for 2021.
“I guess the remedy is just looking at next year,” Humbert said. “The nice thing is we return a lot of kids. Our entire linebacking corps with the exception of one player comes back. With Quinton there now we’ll have three returning starters in the secondary. O-line-wise we’ve got three guys back, and all but one of our receivers is back.
“We’ve also got a large underclassmen group coming up that really has everything. We’ve got linebackers, receivers, quarterbacks, linemen. If we can expediate the learning curve with the young kids, I think we’re going to be solid.”
The great strides Martin has made in his freshman year gives Belle Vernon a second dangerous weapon in addition to Whitlock next year.
“Quinton was our tailback in our spread stuff and he started at receiver for us. But when Dane Anden got hurt, we pushed him into that (starting tailback) role and he did real well in the three games Dane wasn’t there. HeĢƵ a kid who has a ton of upside. ItĢƵ nice to have Devin but itĢƵ nice to have Quinton as a complementary asset, as well.
“ThatĢƵ something to look forward to. But it still doesn’t cloud the fact that we thought this was the year for us to finally get that WPIAL title, and maybe even a little bit more.”
(Rob Burchianti contributed to this story.)