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'06 OH QB Rudy Kirbus (John Carroll signee)

plaindealer

9/8/05

St. Ignatius vs. Philadelphia St. Joseph's Prep

What, when, where: Nonleague game, 1 p.m., Plymouth Whitemarsh High School in Pennsylvania. Call 216-651-0222 for directions.

Records: St. Ignatius 2-0, St. Joe Prep 1-0.

What to watch: St. Ignatius defeated the Hawks, 26-6, at Parma's Byers Field last season. However, St. Joe Prep returned a veteran nucleus this season, including nine starters on defense. The Hawks and the Wildcats are ranked 37th and 38th, respectively, in the latest Student Sports Fab 50 national poll.
 
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9/12/05


The best football team in Philadelphia was too much for St. Ignatius on Saturday.

St. Joseph’s Prep, ranked No. 1 by the Philadelphia Inquirer, rolled up 421 yards of offense and beat the Wildcats, 28-14, at Plymouth Whitemarsh High School in Pennsylvania.

St. Ignatius (2-1), ranked No. 2 in The Plain Dealer Top 25, failed to stop 5-8 running back John Shaw, who rushed for 200 yards on 20 carries and accounted for all but 66 of the Hawks’ rushing yards. Shaw put the game away with a 70-yard touchdown run with 3:57 remaining in the fourth quarter.

He also scored on a 20-yard screen pass for Prep (2-0), which has won 48 of its last 51 games. St. Ignatius (2-1) got 241 yards and two passing TDs from senior quarterback Rudy Kirbus, but the Wildcats managed just 57 yards on the ground. St. Ignatius plays at Mentor on Friday.
 
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9/15/05

St. Ignatius at Mentor

What, when, where: Nonleague game, 7:30 p.m., at Mentor Stadium, 6477 Center St. (Ohio 615), Mentor. Call 440-974-5304.

Records: St. Ignatius 2-1; Mentor 1-2.

What to watch: A must-win in Week 4? It is if a playoff berth is to be won. Mentor travels to Massillon next week before taking on the weak Lake Erie League, where second-level points will be few. St. Ignatius has more chances to pick up playoff points down the line, but the Wildcats don't have much room for error with a nine-game schedule. Both teams struggled to stop the run last week in defeats, albeit against strong rushing attacks. The Wildcats gave up 266 yards rushing to Philadelphia powerhouse St. Joseph Prep, and Solon had 270 yards rushing against Mentor.
 
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good game for Kirbus

Cleveland.com

Kirbus-to-Parris hookup good for four touchdowns
Saturday, September 17, 2005

Tim Warsinskey
Plain Dealer Reporter

St. Ignatius wideout Robby Parris has seen it so many times before, when quarterback Rudy Kirbus gets on a roll, but this time it was special.

"Tonight he was just spectacular," Parris said. "He's probably the smartest player I've ever met when it comes to sports. When he gets the time, he just lays it in there. His passes were just perfect tonight, and there's no stopping him when he's on a roll like that."

Mentor certainly could not stop Kirbus, or Parris for that matter, as St. Ignatius rolled to a 55-35 victory Friday night in Mentor Stadium.

Kirbus completed 15 of 16 passes for 253 yards and four touchdowns, with all the scores landing in the soft hands of Parris, a Notre Dame recruit. Parris caught nine passes for 163 yards, and his last four receptions were touchdowns totaling 104 yards.

Kirbus also ran 11 times for 81 yards and a touchdown. He fumbled at the goal line on another play, but the Wildcats recovered in the end zone.

St. Ignatius scored on eight of its first nine possessions and had 503 yards total offense. Senior tailback Nick Secue ran 15 times for 136 yards, including an 80-yard touchdown run.

St. Ignatius (3-1) recovered from a loss to Philadelphia powerhouse St. Joseph Prep last week and can continue to focus on the playoffs. Mentor (1-3), battered by a brutal schedule, turns its attention to the Lake Erie League's Lake Division.

Mentor moved the ball well behind junior quarterback Kellen Oleksak, who completed 15 of 22 passes for 242 yards and a touchdown, and rushed for another.

Kirbus orchestrated consecutive 80-yard scoring drives for a 13-0 lead in the first quarter. St. Ignatius started its last two drives of the first half inside the Mentor 45-yard line and converted each into touchdowns. Kirbus scored on a 2-yard shotgun draw and he threw an 8-yard TD pass to Parris for a 28-7 lead with 14 seconds left.

Mentor opened the second half with a 67-yard scoring drive and Casey Stovey dove in from the 1. But the Wildcats came roaring back. Secue busted an 80-yard touchdown run over right tackle, and Kirbus threw a 41-yard touchdown pass to Parris for a 42-14 lead.

Mentor sophomore quarterback Bart Tanski guided the Cardinals' second string to two TDs in the fourth quarter, prompting the Wildcats to reinsert several defensive starters.

"This was about playing four quarters for us," Mentor coach Steve Trivisonno said. "We didn't think we had done that up until tonight. They had 22 seniors and we had seven. We knew this was going to be a tough one, but we did some good things."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

[email protected]440-602-4784
 
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A picture of Kirbus in action from last nights game...

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St. Ignatius quarterback Rudy Kirbus drops back to pass during the Wildcats' 55-35 win over Mentor. Kirbus finished the game 15-16 through the air for 253 yards and four touchdowns. He also rushed 11 times for 81 yards in the game.


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St. Ignatius quarterback Rudy Kirbus runs the ball while trying to avoid the hit from the Cardinals' Ryan Dugan during the Wildcats' 55-35 win at Mentor.

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9/24/05

No. 3 St. Ignatius 41, Penn (Ind.) 19

Senior quarterback Rudy Kirbus threw five touchdown passes, including four that were snared by senior Robby Parris, as the Wildcats moved to 4-1 with the win in Indiana.

Kirbus has 15 TD passes in five games. Parris has caught 11 of them.
Kirbus was 15-of-26 for 307 yards. Parris had 10 receptions for 239 yards.
 
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9/29/05

7 p.m., Parma's Byers Field. Byers is located at the intersection of Ridge Road and Day Drive, adjacent to Parmatown Mall. Call 216-651-0222.

Records: Massillon 5-0; St. Ignatius 4-1.

What to watch: It is a matchup of two of the most tradition-rich programs in the country. The Tigers, ranked among the top five teams in the state in Division I, have not defeated the Wildcats in eight meetings. However, this Massillon team brings a new attitude instilled by new coach Tom Stacy, the former offensive coordinator at Ashland University. Tigers tailback Brian Gamble has rushed for 635 yards and seven touchdowns on 70 carries, and quarterback Bobby Huth has completed 49 of 78 passes for 750 yards, nine TDs and no interceptions. Massillon is confident it can contain St. Ignatius' passing game, which is keyed by senior quarterback Rudy Kirbus (1,124 yards, 15 TDs, five interceptions).
 
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10/2/05

Tigers tbeat Ignatius in final seconds

Sunday, October 2, 2005 <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>By Todd Porter Repository sports writer
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. Massillon defender Robert Morris (at right, 42) fights off a block by St. Ignatius’ Scott Biehl (32) to tackle quarterback Rudy Kirbus on Saturday.

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PARMA — At precisely 9:52 Saturday night, Shawn Weisend was ready to give away everything he owned. Everything except the feeling inside his chest, the one he will remember for the rest of his life.

Ditto that for the entire city of Massillon.
The 1,000-pound gorilla is off the Tigers’ back. Weisend’s 5-yard touchdown run with 10 seconds left at Byers Field gave the Tigers their first lead over St. Ignatius. Weisend’s 2-point conversion run made it 29-26, while Brian Gamble’s interception sealed it with three ticks left.

“Thanks, Coach, for the opportunity,” the senior quarterback said as he hugged first-year Tiger head coach Tom Stacy. “This is the best feeling in my life.”

Stacy nodded.

Weisend tried to blink away tears. There’s no crying in a high school football locker room, except when you were the 4-6 team that got trounced by Ignatius last year. The Wildcats came in having beaten Massillon in all eight games between the two schools.

“This is a great win for the new regime here, the program, the community,” Stacy said. “It’s a great feeling. ... What a fourth quarter.”

Massillon shut out Ignatius, 15-0, during the final quarter.

The win wasn’t how Stacy drew it up, but the emotion was exactly what he imagined.

Starting quarterback Bobby Huth took a pounding, eventually leaving in the middle of the game-winning drive. What would you do with 10 seconds left and a backup quarterback?

“We had confidence in Shawn,” Stacy said. “No doubt. I’m not surprised we won this game. Right now, our kids are playing with such confidence and resolve. They think they could beat anybody in the state. Without their belief, there is no way we come back from a 12-point halftime deficit, but we did.”

A Wildcat first-quarter punt pinned the Tigers inside their 5. Massillon’s offense sputtered, and the Tigers punted from their own end zone
That set up Ignatius at the Tigers 31. It took the Wildcats three plays to score from there as running back Scott Biehl went 13 yards for a 7-0 lead.
The ensuing kickoff was dropped, and Massillon started at its 4. A holding penalty negated Huth’s third-down conversion. On the next play, Huth was sacked in the end zone by Brian Neff. The Wildcats led, 9-0, and Massillon was reeling with 3:20 left in the first quarter.

But they never gave up. They never lost faith.

Weisend’s free kick after the safety put the ball at Ignatius’ 27. On third-and-21, Rudy Kirbus hit Nick Secure for a 26-yard gain to the Ignatius 45. Antonio James sacked Kirbus to force a third-and-20. This time it wasn’t converted. Still, Massillon started its own 11 with 8:53 left in the second quarter.

Then, the Tigers caught a break. As Weisend lined up to punt, the ball skipped back to him. Weisend picked up the football and hit the left corner for a 12-yard gain and a first down.

Huth completed his first pass on the next play, a 13-yarder to Zack Vanryzin. On third-and-8, Gamble took an option pitch for 10 yards to the Ignatius 47. The Tigers converted another third down when fullback Robert Morris broke a tackle at the line of scrimmage for 7 yards to the Wildcat 36.
Four plays later, with Gamble lined up in the right slot, Huth rolled left and hit Gamble on the right sideline for a 28-yard score. Steve Schott’s PAT made it 9-7, and Massillon was in the game.

Another touchdown and a school-record 50-yard field goal as the half expired, though, gave Ignatius a 19-7 lead.

“We talked about winning at halftime,” Stacy said. “The kids said we’d get it done. It was like that the entire game. When Shawn went in the game, he said, ‘Coach, don’t worry about ... I can do it.’ ”

Massillon started the second half with a 14-play, 77-yard drive in which the Tigers converted four third downs. The drive ended when fullback Quentin Nicholson scored from the 1, cutting it to 19-14.

Back and forth it went.

Ignatius scored on a 2-yard Jim Castrigano run.

Massillon answered on its first possession of the fourth quarter, a 16-play, 90-yard drive that ended with Gamble scoring from the 1. Huth connected on key passes, and Weisend threw a 10-yard pass on a fake punt for a first down.

“We gave them some new formations in the fourth quarter that we hadn’t shown before,” Stacy said.

It was 26-21, and Massillon needed a stop. Gamble broke up a huge third-down pass from Kirbus to Robby Parris. The hit jarred the ball loose, and Parris right knee bent awkwardly. He was taken off the field on a stretcher. Massillon had momentum.

With 2:38 left and the entire Tiger nation raising the roof, Massillon began a drive that will go down as one of the biggest in the program’s history.

Gamble ran for 19 yards on first down. On fourth-and-4, Lanale Robinson broke a tackle and gained 10 yards to convert. On fourth-and-15 at the Ignatius 42, Weisend hit Zack Vanryzin for 24 yards to the Wildcat 18.
Eventually, the Tigers worked inside the 5.

Weisend had the game in his hands. He saw Gamble open in the flat as he rolled right.

“I thought Brian had a 50-50 chance to get in, because the defender was trailing him,” Weisend said. “Then I thought I could get in. I had to do it for my teammates, for myself and for Massillon. It was like an out-of-body experience.”

That’s a feeling that won’t go away for a while for anyone, especially a backup, senior quarterback.

“Shawn,” Stacy said, “you made the most of your opportunity.”
You can reach Repository sports writer Todd Porter at (330) 580-8340 or e-mail: [email protected]
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Per BN...

Cleveland St. Ignatius turned back Warren Harding 24-6 as QB Rudy Kirbus completed 14 of 21 passes for 218 yards and a TD and also rushed for 61 yards and two scores. For the year, Kirbus has completed 92 of 140 passes for 1,532 yards and 17 TDs.
 
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10/13/05

St. Ignatius vs. St. Edward

What, when, where: Nonleague game, 7 p.m., Lakewood Stadium.

Lakewood Stadium is located at the intersection of Bunts Road and Madison Avenue. Call 216-521-8828. The game is a sellout.

Records: St. Ignatius 5-2; St. Edward 6-0.

What to watch: The "Madhouse on Madison" will be rocking to the tune of the 41st meeting between the area's fourth- ranked Wildcats and second-ranked Eagles. The Wildcats lead the series, 21-18-1. Despite some key injuries on defense, St. Edward has played solid football on both sides of the ball and will be looking for its first victory over the Wildcats since 2001, when Shaun Carney (now at Air Force) engineered a 44-41 overtime victory. St. Ignatius is seeking its 18th consecutive trip to the Division I playoffs, and the Eagles are looking to advance to the Division I postseason for the sixth consecutive year.
 
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10/14/05

<TABLE class=bg0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=428 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width=418>[FONT=arial,sans-serif]Wednesday, October 12, 2005[/FONT]</TD><TD></TD></TR><TR><TD width=5>
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[FONT=arial,sans-serif]Week 8 Big Game Preveiw: The Holy War
WHAT: cleveland.com's BIG GAME OF THE WEEK

WHEN: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2005, 7:00 PM

WHO: #2 ST. EDWARD (6-0) VS. #4 ST. IGNATIUS (5-2)

WHERE: LAKEWOOD STADIUM, LAKEWOOD, OHIO.

SERIES: The Holy War was played in 1952 with St. Ignatius winning that game 41-12. All time St. Ignatius holds a slight edge 21-19-1, included winning the last three years. St. Ignatius Head Coach Chuck Kyle is 15-6-1, while St. Edward Head Coach John Gibbons has won just once in six tries.

LAST YEAR: St. Ignatius made it three years in a row with at 26-10 victory.

THE MATCH-UP: St. Ignatius and St. Edward, The Holy War, 'nuff said. This neighborhood rivalry is one of the best in the region, if not the state. Year in and year out, important computer points and playoff positioning are riding on this game. As important as both those components are, there is something bigger on the line; bragging rights. The young men playing in this game know each other well. They have been playing, either with each or against each other, since they first touched a football. Grown men transform back to their high school days and pack a stadium each year to be part of this tradition.

St. Edwards comes into this game ranked second in The Plain Dealer Top 25, fourth in Division I, Region 1 in the computer rankings, and fifth in the AP state poll. The Eagles are coming off an easy victory over Cleveland East 41-6. In fact, in their last two games they have out scored their opponents 90-6 (on October 1, they beat Buffalo St. Francis 49-0). They have been able to rest their starters much of the second half of those games. This should mean not only are the starters fresh for St. Ignatius, but the back-ups have received plenty of reps and will be ready to go if called upon.

The Wildcats of S. Ignatius enter the game ranked fourth in the PD Top 25 and just a few points behind the Eagles in the computer rankings. They were able to rebound after the 29-26 loss in Week 6 to Massillon with a 24-6 win over Warren Harding last week.

KEYS TO THE GAME

1. Running game. Both these schools look to run the ball first but for different reasons. St. Ignatius does so to open the passing game for QB Rudy Kirbus and they do it nicely with RBs Nick Secue and Jim Castrigano. Secue is a shifty, every down back while Castrigano comes in to spell Secue and adds some power in between the tackles. Both, however, are capable of making the big play. As for St. Ed's, they pound the ball and then pound it some more. Frank Edmonds is their work horse and a solid one at that. They will ride him until the Wildcats can prove they can stop him. If they can't stop him, Edmonds will carry the Eagles to a Holy War victory.

2. Quick start. For St. Ignatius this is critical. They need to jump out to an early lead and force St. Ed's to play from behind, something the Eagles have yet to experience all year. If they can strike first and hold on to that lead, St. Ed's might be forced to throw the ball more than they feel comfortable doing. Coach Gibbons' offensive attack has become more balanced, but the run remains the strength. A quick score and lead could give the Wildcats the edge in momentum they need to pull out a victory.

3. Big Plays and Special Teams. It seems redundant but there is no getting around it. There is no question that special teams play will have some sort of affect on the result of this game. Both coaches feel confident in their teams' ability to get the job done in this third of the game. The game could be close done the stretch and the difference could be a punt, a kick return or a missed field goal. Next is the big play. It goes unsaid that you need at least one of these throughout the course of a game to be successful. On a field full of big playmakers, who is going to be the biggest and make them when they count the most? Big time players find a way to make big time plays in big time games, and this is a big time game.

KEY PLAYERS

1. The Wide Receivers of St. Ignatius. Two weeks ago the Wildcats lost their standout reciever Robby Parris for the year with a hip injury. They have played one game already and have had two weeks to find someone to fill in for Parris. Coach Kyle says you cannot just replace someone as special as Parris but they need to find someone who can step up nonetheless. Bill O'Malley has been a solid receiver all year and should see even more balls the rest of the way. Junior Ben Jurevicius has also seen more playing time and done a very nice job in recent weeks. Kyle says that it is painful to lose a player like Parris but it just might bring his team closer together. They know they all have to play harder, step up and come together to get the job done. Now we'll just have to see if they can execute that on the field Saturday night.

2. QB Brandon Frohnapple. The St. Ed's quarterback could be the most underrated player on the field. With St. Ignatius keying in on Edmonds and the running game of the Eagles, it will be up to Frohnapple to keep them honest. St. Ed's has a talented group of targets surrounding Frohnapple led by Kyle Hubbard and Anthony Capasso. Frohnapple does have the ability to make the big play if the Wildcats defense focuses too much on Edmonds.
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10/16/05

Eagles' defense sacks the 'Cats


Sunday, October 16, 2005 Eddie Dwyer
Plain Dealer Reporter

St. Edward junior tailback Frank Ed monds said his team never gave up on him Saturday night.

Edmonds, bottled up for three quarters by a staunch St. Ignatius defense, came on strong in the final 12 minutes and combined with the Eagles' defense in turning back the Wildcats, 10-7, in front of a standing-room crowd of more than 10,000 at Lakewood Stadium.

St. Edward, with Edmonds rushing for 75 of his 120 yards in the fourth quarter and scoring the winning touchdown with 9:04 remaining, improved to 7-0 and probably earned its seventh consecutive Division I playoff appearance.

St. Ignatius, whose 18th consecutive trip to the Division I postseason might depend on the outcome of next weekend's home matchup with Ohio's top-ranked Cincinnati St. Xavier, slipped to 5-3. The Wildcats are 0-18 against St. Edward when they score 13 or less points.

"I knew I had to pick it up, and the offensive line did a great job staying on their blocks," said Edmonds, who carried the ball 34 times. "We finished strong, and it was a great, great competition."

Both defenses were especially strong in a scoreless first half as the Wildcats turned the Eagles away at the St. Ignatius 44-, 12- and 40-yard lines and also came up with interceptions by junior linebacker Pat Mascia and junior defensive back Bryan Sylvester.

St. Edward's defense sacked St. Ignatius senior quarterback Rudy Kirbus three times in the first 24 minutes and hurried him on several other pass attempts.

Neither team was able to run the football effectively in the first half, with the Wildcats limiting Edmonds to 30 yards rushing on his first 13 carries. St. Ignatius had minus-15 yards rushing in the first two quarters.

In a serious note, play was stopped for nearly 10 minutes in the first quarter when an official was knocked hard to the turf after colliding with two St. Edward defensive backs and St. Ignatius two-way end John Ryan. The official was taken from the field on a stretcher and transported by ambulance to Lakewood Hospital for treatment.

St. Edward scored first after 6-3, 225-pound junior split end Kyle Hubbard hauled in a pass at the St. Ignatius 32 and was tackled at the Wildcats' 5.

But St. Ignatius' defense, led by the pursuit of senior tackle Marty Kern, forced the Eagles to settle for a 21-yard field goal by Ben Rios.

St. Edward's lead was short-lived, however, as the Wildcats responded with a four-play, 58-yard drive that featured a 2-yard touchdown pass from Kirbus to Ryan off a perfect play-action fake by Kirbus. The touchdown was set up by a 41-yard pass from Kirbus to senior wideout David Thompson.

But just when St. Ignatius was riding the momentum, St. Edward's defense and special teams turned the tide.

First it was an interception in the Eagles' end zone by senior cornerback Chris Divis and then standout junior safety Nate Oliver, who was a force all night, recovered a fumbled punt at the Wildcats' 47. Five plays later, Edmonds took the handoff, found a seam, bounced outside and went 29 yards down the left sideline for the score that gave St. Edward its 19th victory in 41 meetings with its West Side rival.

From that point, the Eagles were able to take it home behind Edmonds' running and more clutch defense.

"I would love to have one more play back," said St. Ignatius' veteran defensive line coach Dan Corrigan, referring to Edmonds' game-winner. "But he broke it well."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

[email protected], 216-999-4677

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Rudy Kirbus loosing up his arm.
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Kirbus stretching his legs.
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