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Sports

Bad Start On The Road Buries Wildkits

Mistakes Add Up In 49-20 Defeat

ETHSWillieWildkit_Head
ETHSWillieWildkit_Head

Bad starts at home can be overcome sometimes in high school football.

But bad starts on the road? That only leads to a bad outcome.

A lost fumble, penalties and dropped passes added up to a 21-0 deficit in the first quarter for Evanston’s floundering football team Thursday night at Palatine, and the Pirates pulled away for a lopsided 49-20 victory behind a record performance from running back Dominik Ball.

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The Wildkits dropped their third straight contest and will take a 1-3 overall record into next week’s Central Suburban League South division opener against winless Glenbrook South.

Ball, a Tulane University recruit, turned in the best performance by an opposing back since Mike Burzawa took over as Evanston’s head coach --- and perhaps one of the best by a foe in program history. He rushed for four touchdowns, caught a touchdown pass, and carried 24 times for a school record 296 yards to lift the Pirates to 2-2 on the year.

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ETHS fans might have wondered why Ball was still in the backfield with 11 minutes left and Palatine already ahead by 5 touchdowns. He finished off his record night with 7 straight carries against Evanston’s second line defense, but no one could really accuse the Pirates of running up the score.

Evanston’s first line defense wasn’t really any tougher on the elusive Ball than the backups.

“That No. 7 is a helluva back,” said Burzawa, a former All-State running back himself. “We’d have him stopped in the backfield and he’d cut back all the way across the grain, get to the second level and he was gone. We weren’t able to stop him.

“I thought we really killed ourselves in that first quarter with penalties and dropped balls. We didn’t play fundamentally sound football as a group in that first quarter, and the first quarter when you’re on the road is always critical. We jumped offside 2 or 3 times and we lacked execution in all phases of the game.

“We did show some growth and I still believe in this team. I’m seeing toughness that I like to see and I’m happy about the way we battled and fought. We still have a lot of football to play, and next week is a new beginning for us.”

Ball, in a great impersonation of a ghost with Halloween still a month away, scored on TD runs of 11, 36 and 60 yards in the first period alone. By halftime he had piled up 201 yards on the ground, including another touchdown burst of 39 yards, and Evanston’s only score came on a 17-yard pass from Colin Livatino (13-of-20 passing for 112 yards, 1 interception) to Emmett Robinson in the second quarter.

Ball slipped out of the backfield to score his 5th touchdown of the night, on an 8-yard pass from Tommy Elter, and you could give the Pirates’ star partial credit for another score even though he didn’t touch the ball himself. A play-action fake set up Elter’s 42-yard toss for a TD to Tyson Moorer in the third stanza.

Highlights for the Wildkits included the first varsity touchdowns scored in their respective careers by juniors Enijel Shelton and Daryl Harmon.

Shelton did the heavy lifting on an 80-yard march that began in the third quarter, as his punishing physical style eventually produced a 5-yard scoring run. The 5-foot-8, 180-pounder finished with 7 carries for 61 yards.

Harmon, the No. 2 quarterback, led the visitors on an 8-play, 80-yard scoring drive in the final minutes. He plowed into the end zone with just 25 second left in the contest from the 4 and was credited with 75 yards on the ground on 5 carries.

Palatine rolled up 313 yards rushing compared to 182 for ETHS.

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