
11-19-2005, 11:14 AM
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11/18/05
Quote:
Bombers face QB challenge
Earley leads explosive offense
By Carey Hoffman
Enquirer contributor
Last week's challenge for St. Xavier was to prepare for the ultimate rushing offense in Colerain.
This week, it has to deal with southwest Ohio's top quarterback.
St. X (12-0) meets Huber Heights Wayne (11-1) in a Division I regional championship game at 12:30 p.m. today at UC's Nippert Stadium. The winner advances to the state semifinals.
Wayne is led by Alex Earley, a 6-foot-1, 195-pound senior quarterback who was named as the Southwest Ohio District Division I Offensive Player of the Year. He's the heart of a Wayne offense that averages nearly 39 points a game.
"Their quarterback, Alex Earley, is pretty special," said St. X coach Steve Specht. "Whatever 'it' is, he's got it."
That would be hard to deny after Earley has led Wayne to come-from-behind victories against Moeller and then Centerville in the first two rounds of the playoffs.
Against Moeller, he threw for 245 yards and four TDs. Against Centerville, he scored on a 50-yard run early and then led his team out of an 18-point deficit with just seven minutes remaining by throwing for three more TDs.
"Our kids have seen it on film, what he can accomplish, what he can do," Specht said. "And they have a lot of skill guys he can go to. He's a special young man. These are the kind of kids you love to play against. You want to play the best, and we've got that opportunity."
Earley has thrown for 2,492 yards and 25 TDs this year, against only five interceptions. He also has run for 566 yards.
His favorite receiver is 6-2 senior Billy Viers, a first-team all Greater Western Ohio Conference honoree, and he has a dangerous scatback in 5-7 junior Joe Gilford.
Defensively, Wayne is led by tackle Martin Channels (6-0, 300), linebacker Jeff Cleveland (6-1, 220) and defensive back Brandon Davis (6-0, 170).
The Warriors have one more weapon to remember in senior Josh Fickert, the first-team all-district choice at kicker.
Wayne has played three common opponents with St. X: Elder, Moeller and Fairfield. Fairfield did the best job in holding Earley in check, limiting him to 94 passing yards and 11 rushing yards in the second week of the season.
Four turnovers, including one interception returned for a TD, overcame Fairfield's defensive effort of holding Wayne to just 203 total yards, as Wayne won 28-27.
Fairfield coach Scott Dattilo said his staff didn't concentrate on stopping Earley as much as defending against Wayne's spread passing-attack scheme. Fairfield rushed only three linemen, then put the rest of the defense in coverage to defend the quick passing game Wayne often employs.
"I don't know if we have a true dropback spread passing team that throws it 25 times a game down here," Dattilo said when asked if any local teams compare to Wayne. "We've got a lot of teams that will run the ball out of the spread, but not spread passing teams. It's kind of unique - they just want the quarterback to slice-and-dice you."
Dattilo sees the key for Wayne being whether it can successfully run its passing game.
"Nobody's scored points on X, or run the ball on them," said Dattilo, whose team lost to St. X 45-0 in the first round of the playoffs. "Their run defense is unbelievable. Wayne's chance to put up points is to have a high-percentage passing game and keep their defense off the field."
"Their offense is obviously conducive to scoring at any point in time," Specht said of Wayne. "When you throw like (Earley) can, you can be effective. He can throw on the run or in the pocket. He can beat you with his arm or his legs. If you get ahead and think you're up by enough, you're not. We want to get up in this game, but if we do, we can't rest on that (lead)."
Wayne has won 11 games in a row since dropping its season opener to Elder 21-14.
Wayne, a playoff qualifier in five of the past seven years, made it all the way to the state championship game that year before losing to Cleveland St. Ignatius 24-10.
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