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High School Grandview Bobcats

wadc45

Bourbon, Bow Ties and Baseball Hats
BP Recruiting Team
Time for a little love for the town I grew up in...didn't go to school there but a friend of mine is a MS coach there.

Grandview drops small-town look on football field

Friday, November 04, 2005

Life in a small Ohio town with a playoffbound high-school football team might be as good as it gets in sports. The community spirit is like a relic from the ’50s. It is like living in a Norman Rockwell painting.

Now try to imagine moving that idyllic little football town into the center of the state’s largest city.

Impossible?

That scene describes exactly what is happening in Grandview Heights.

"It’s incredible the way the community has embraced this," Grandview coach Scott Gordon said. "We’ll be out on our practice field and cars are constantly slowing down, and people are honking at us or yelling at us. We’re constantly getting people showing up asking what they can do.

"One of the local restaurants here, the Knotty Pine, has provided us with pregame meals at no charge, all season long. And the guys from the 1987 team (the last Grandview team to make the playoffs) continue to come around and introduce themselves and say, ‘Hey, it’s great to see this happening again.’ "

In this sprawling metropolitan area, Grandview is one of those quaint little places that a lot of us don’t think much about it. It is both suburb and inner city and it is neither; in some ways, it really is a small town.

Houses surround the football field. There is a giant oak tree just beyond the south end zone. The Depression-era stadium, refurbished last year, was built by the WPA. Most of the fans walk to the games.

In a local high-school world dominated by the Dublins, Hilliards and Westervilles and Catholic powers such as Watterson and De-Sales, it isn’t the kind of place you’d expect to find a 9-1 team that is the talk of the neighborhood. And until Gordon and this group of seniors arrived, that part of the picture was ancient history.

When the Bobcats won the Mid-State League’s Cardinal Division championship this year, it was the first football title for Grandview since 1979, when WTVN sportscaster Larry Larson coached the team.

So what changed? A lot of things.

In 2003, Gordon brought a new offense and a new attitude to a program that had posted only one winning season in 15 years. He found all-state quarterback Alex Rouch on the golf team, or rather Rouch found him, and discovered that that sophomore class had the kind of athletes not normally found at a Division V school. And receiver Ben Graves and linebacker Craig Cataline might be good enough to play anywhere.

"There are a lot of similarities between this group and that team we had in ’79," Larson said. "We were carried that year by a wonderful senior class. It was their last hurrah and they took the whole season just that way. This year, you have a senior class that has been successful since junior high and they’ve stayed together and done the same thing."

To that, Gordon added his offense, part of which he learned as a graduate assistant coach at Florida under Steve Spurrier. Gordon got support on refurbishing the old stadium, which he said reminded of him of "a Turkish prison," and made sure the players knew about Grandview’s football tradition, even if he had to go back a way to find it.

Last February, former Grandview star Ralph Gugliemi, an All-American quarterback at Notre Dame, came back for a smoker. Gugliemi was the No. 4 pick in the 1955 NFL draft and an eight-year NFL veteran.

"We kind of had a melding of the old generation and the new generation," Gordon said. "He spoke to all of our players that week about that history and gave them a bridge to the past. It really blew them away. To be honest with you, I think it helped cement in their minds that this isn’t just a place where sports are something to do, that we can have some greatness here."

So it is that Grandview beat Newark Catholic this season — who could have ever seen Grandview beating the seventime state champion Green Wave — and won its first league championship in 26 years. So it is that it travels to Lucasville Valley tonight for its first playoff game in 18 years.

Greatness? Yep.

"What we said when we came in here was, ‘Why not?’ " Gordon said. "Why can’t we compete with the best? Why can’t we be the best? We’ve got everything here. We’ve got really nice facilities. We’ve got an outstanding community with great families. We have a great educational philosophy in the school. We have good athletes. We have everything in place, so why not us?"

No matter what happens from here on out, isn’t it nice they can finally stop asking that question?

Bob Hunter is a sports columnist for The Dispatch .


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tough loss for the Bobcats...

LUCASVILLE VALLEY 21 | GRANDVIEW 14
Grandview can’t stop ground game in loss

Saturday, November 05, 2005

Shawn Mitchell

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

LUCASVILLE, Ohio — Between the bands, the fans and the big-game atmosphere of last night’s regional quarterfinal between Grandview and Lucasville Valley, there was plenty of pageantry to go around in the Division V game.

Boiled down, though, it was a simple children’s game that decided the outcome.

Valley played a better game of keepaway, leading to a 21-14 win and a regional semifinal date with Ready.

The Indians hogged the ball. They kept a balanced — and potent — Bobcats offense off the field for most of the game. They ate up the clock at a voracious rate. They ran and ran and ran some more, gaining 314 yards on 68 carries.

"You’ve got to give credit to them for being able to execute," Grandview quarterback Alex Rouch said. "When you continue to make big plays and are able to sustain long drives, you get what you deserve. That’s a great football team, the best we’ve played this season."

Valley running back Travis Jones led the way with 200 yards and a touchdown on 37 carries. David Myers had 52 yards on 11 carries, and Ryan Turner churned out 39 yards and scored two touchdowns. Despite their hefty workload, neither appeared to tire. The Grandview defense did.

"Our kids just physically wore them out," Valley coach Darren Crabtree said. "We’ve had a three- and four-back attack all year. Tonight, they seemed to have the extra step or two. Nothing real long — we knew their speed could run us down — but we wanted to pound it."

That was in marked contrast to the approach of the Bobcats, who reached the playoffs for the first time since 1987 in part because of an exceptional passing game. But it fizzled against some superb man-to-man coverage by Valley (10-1).

Rouch finished 8 of 24 for 91 yards and an interception that came on a game-ending heave. Ben Graves, who entered the game averaging 6.8 catches, was held to three for 28 yards.

But pass-happy Grandview (9-2) did not immediately take to the air. The Bobcats turned the tables on the Indians with a 67-yard opening drive in which they ran the ball on eight of nine plays. A 3-yard run by Josh Rowe and extra point by Ben Bartholomew gave Grandview a 7-0 lead with 7:57 to go in the first quarter.

"They came to our house and broke down the door on that drive," Crabtree said. "But we were able to do what we wanted after that: keep that offense off the field."

Touchdown runs by Jones and Turner put Valley ahead 14-7 at halftime, and it owned the second half.

The Indians dominated the third quarter with an opening drive of 8:33 before being stopped on fourth-and-goal from the 1. But Grandview went three-and-out, and Valley went up 21-7 with 10:39 to go on Turner’s second touchdown.

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Mid-State League roundup (Weekend updates)
Granville 49, Grandview 7
Corey Becher threw four touchdown passes and ran for a score, and Granville (3-0) defeated visiting Grandview (1-2).
Becher completed 17 of 23 passes for 276 yards. Adam Alderman caught 10 passes for 141 yards and scored three touchdowns.
Mike Crawford led Grandview with 55 yards rushing and a touchdown.
 
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