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Schools

Video gamer turns the tide in favor of Lighthouse football

The Saints won with a 'thunder and lightning' offense of bruising runs, but it was a kid who previously only talked big that came up big.

Brandon Farah, formerly not the biggest figure on the Lighthouse Christian Academy squad, was a hero of the game when he came up with an interception.
Brandon Farah, formerly not the biggest figure on the Lighthouse Christian Academy squad, was a hero of the game when he came up with an interception. (Mike Ashcraft)

Brandon Farah hadn't figured prominently in any play this year. Or last year.

But on Friday, the senior -- who's 99 parts gamer and 1 part football player -- came up big in the third quarter with an interception that hammered the nail into the coffin of Beacon Hill Classical Academy. His heroics, in the red zone, preceded a 70-yard touchdown run by Marcus Scribner that left no doubt that tide had turned. Lighthouse Christian Academy won 62-28.

"I didn't know the ball hit me until I got it, until I looked down," Brandon said, projecting modesty in his moment of glory.

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Brandon Farah, the softie, played hard. The cocoon burst, and the kid who always said he loved football was finally playing real football. Not just on a monitor.

"It was a great game. It was a great four quarters," said Justin Kayne, offensive coordinator filling in for head coach Zach Scribner who was out sick. "We came out and it was a battle. We scored, they scored, we scored, they scored. We made a few adjustments. Our guys answered the call, and look what happened when we played four quarters of sound, hard-hitting football.

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"This was a statement game," Kayne added. "We made a statement. This is what Lighthouse football is all about. This is one win. We are going to build on this win. We're going to continue to build on this."

The Saints now have one win and two losses in CIF Southern Section 8-man football.

No one could have predicted a landslide victory by half time. Both teams seemed pretty even, score for score, man for man, plays for plays. One ref called the high-scoring 1st quarter a "track event" because there was so much running for touchdowns. LCA was ahead by a slim 22-20.

When the Saints fumbled in the 2nd quarter, it gave the Gryphons a chance to pull ahead.

However, the team from Camarillo failed to capitalize on that gift. In response, the Santa Monica boys scored. It was 30-20 at half time.

In the second half, both teams wanted to come out strong. LCA got the upper hand.

Marcus Scribner was running rampant with the ball. He was burning opponents with speed, breaking ankles with cuts and punishing with stinging hits when Gryphons were making tackles. He smashed them, strong-armed them and ground down their will to put up a fight. Every WWF body slam was an injection of intimidation for opponents.

While Marcus was playing the unstoppable superhero, his LCA teammates were stepping up and making contributions.

Senior Hosea Ashcraft, alternating with Marcus, ran the ball to keep the Gryphon defense guessing. Originally a soccer player who never really understood the intricacies of football, Hosea was dashing with speed, power and cuts that he had never made before.

Quarterback Pat Canon was making unaccustomed tackles on defense, and secret weapon Steven Lahood was catching passes when the opponents concentrated too much on countering the "thunder and lightning" attack of Marcus and Hosea.

Even the kid brother, freshman Rob Scribner made a 2-point conversion reception. Overwhelmed with excitement that as a slender and small freshman he had succeeded in varsity football, Rob spiked the football, a violation that penalized the Saints kickoff 10 yards.

The offensive and defensive lines are to be credited. The Gryphons couldn't make a single sack.

But the runaway surprise was Brandon.

In addition to his tide-turning interception, Brandon made unaccustomed tackles. On one, he plowed through the ball carrier with his heft and knocked him silly. Coaches were crowing.

This is what high school football is supposed to do: turn boys into men.

Brandon became more than the Saints' hero. He emerged from the rite of passage a man.

Read about Lighthouse's 2019 football opener here and its undermanned valiant stand against Downey here.

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