Skip to main content

Gilmer 54, Diboll 0

From the Longview News-Journal:

Buckeyes thrash Diboll, 54-0

From the Tyler Morning Telegraph:

Gilmer Whips Diboll Lumberjacks, 54-0

From the Lufkin Daily News:

'Jacks knocked out by Buckeyes

From KETK Tyler:

Playoff Time

From The Gilmer Mirror:

Buckeyes shut out Diboll, 54-0



By JOE DODD

The Gilmer Buckeyes' Black Flag Defense shut down the vaunted offense of the Diboll Lumberjacks as Gilmer experienced their first foray into the Region III playoffs with a dominating 54-0 win at Carthage Friday night.

“So far we enjoy Region III,” said Gilmer head coach Jeff Traylor after posting his largest winning margin in a playoff game. “It's been a long time since we've enjoyed a fourth quarter in a first round game. Usually our first round games are wars, so we were grateful.”

A cold front that moved in just before game time, had several Buckeyes remembering their last playoff game; a windy loss to Liberty Hill in last season's state championship game.

“When I saw the wind, I thought about Liberty Hill,” said Gilmer quarterback Stump Godfrey, who led the Buckeyes to a season-low 135 total yards in the 38-13 loss. “That was a learning experience. We got better and we executed well.”

Godfrey's two rushing touchdowns in the first quarter helped the Buckeyes jump out to a commanding 21-0 lead as Gilmer took advantage of a howling wind at their back.

“I'd like to take credit for it, but I lost the flip, so I got lucky,” said Traylor about the Lumberjacks' decision to receive the opening kickoff.

“I definitely didn't want to give them the ball first,” explained Diboll head coach Tom Sheppard, who watched his team's first four possessions total only 27 yards and result in great field position for the Buckeyes. “We just couldn't ever get anything going.”

“It worked out perfect; it couldn't have been better,” admitted Traylor about the wind. Gilmer's worst starting field position in the first half was their own 40-yard line, while Diboll's first seven series started inside their own 20-yard line.

“It was big,” agreed Godfrey. “Once you got that, you've got to take advantage of it, and that's what we did.”

After the Lumberjacks' first series ended with a punt from their own 40-yard line, the Buckeyes took over at their own 41-yard line and marched the 59 yards in seven plays, highlighted by a 23-yard pass on 3rd and 10 from Godfrey to Prentiss Bell to keep the drive alive. Godfrey scored three plays later on a 3-yard run around the left side. Adan Olivares kicked the first of six successful extra points for a 7-0 lead with 6:47 to play in the first quarter.

Two plays later, Diboll quarterback Jacolby Spencer fumbled under heavy pressure and Gilmer's Luis Castro recovered the loose football at the Lumberjacks' 18-yard line.

Jeremy Jackson covered the distance on two carries, scoring from 10 yards out with 5:19 left in the first quarter for a 14-0 Gilmer lead. “We were going to throw the ball a lot more, but since the wind was blowing so hard we got to run some more,” said Jackson, who finished with 99 yards rushing on only 10 carries.

The Buckeyes' defense held Diboll to a three-and-out series on their next possession, giving the ball back to the Buckeyes' offense at their own 40-yard line. A 22-yard pass to Gus Osborne and a 21-yard run by Marlon Granville set up a 6-yard touchdown run by Godfrey with 2:33 remaining in the first quarter for a 21-0 lead.

Another three-and-out series by Diboll gave Gilmer the football at the Lumberjacks' 48-yard line, but the Buckeyes' offense stalled and Luke Turner's 37-yard punt pinned Diboll back at their own 10-yard line.

Four plays later, Gilmer linebacker Mikey Wilson intercepted a Lewis pass at the Buckeyes' 41-yard line. Gilmer drove to the Lumberjacks' 14-yard line before Godfrey had the football stripped from his hands for the Buckeyes only turnover of the game.

Gilmer's defense came to the rescue again when Braylon Webb intercepted Spencer on the next play at the Lumberjacks' 45-yard line.

But for the third straight possession, the Buckeyes' offense stalled. “I wasn't happy about it,” said Traylor when asked if he was concerned at that point in the game. “As good as our defense was, it didn't. I knew we had a 3-touchdown lead, and we were punting well.”

Turner's punt bounced to the 2-yard line where the Buckeyes downed it, leaving Diboll deep in their own territory again.

The Lumberjacks responded with their longest drive of the game, going 55 yards in 10 plays before another Spencer fumble was recovered by Gilmer's Osborne at the Buckeyes' 48-yard line.

Three plays later, Godfrey lofted a perfect pass into the wind and found Tristan Holt open for a 13-yard touchdown with 1:20 to go in the first half. Olivares' extra point kick was ruled wide, so the Buckeyes took a 27-0 lead into the locker room at halftime.

Gilmer was even more dominating in the second half, with the offense scoring on all four possessions, while the defense held Diboll to only 12 total yards.

The Buckeyes took the second half kickoff and drove 74 yards in seven plays, with Godfrey hitting Holt again with another perfect pass into the wind for a 27-yard touchdown just two minutes into the half for a 34-0 lead. “Stump played his best game of the year,” praised Traylor. “He threw it unbelievably well in the wind. I was very proud of him. He threw it into the wind well, he threw it with the wind well; he was very accurate tonight.”

Gilmer's Paul Chesnut ended the Lumberjacks' next drive when he intercepted a Spencer pass at the Buckeyes' own 3-yard line to stop Diboll's only real scoring threat of the game. “We had seen on film where sometimes he would just throw the ball up and the wind was a big factor in that so we were looking for some picks,” said Chesnut.

“We put some good pressure on him, so he made some bad throws and that was the difference in the ball game,” Traylor said.

The Buckeyes stuck to the running game on the next series, covering all 97 yards on the ground. Godfrey finished the drive with his third rushing touchdown of the game, a 3-yard run. “The line blocked great; they had big holes for me to run in, and I was able to make it into the end zone,” said Godfrey, who was untouched on all three of his scoring runs.

“Caleb Denton had a great game and so did Michael Boddie and Beau Blair on the offensive line,” said Traylor.

Diboll's next possession ended in the Lumberjacks' sixth turnover of the game when Granville and D.J. Stanley knocked the ball out of Cornelius Polk's hands at the Diboll 40-yard line and Granville picked up the football and returned it for a touchdown with 1:53 to play in the third quarter for a 48-0 lead.

“We both knocked it out and then I just saw it on the ground and picked it up and ran. I just saw green grass,” said Granville who had seven tackles and two forced fumbles to go along with his 111 rushing yards on just nine carries.

“You have six turnovers, you don't have a chance,” said Diboll's Sheppard. “You can't turn the ball over against Gilmer, they're like sharks.”

“That was the story of the game,” agreed Traylor. “We had one and they had six.”

Two consecutive three-and-outs by Diboll were followed by two Gilmer field goals to complete the scoring in the final quarter.. Olivares' kicks were good from 35 yards and 22 yards.

The shutout was the Buckeyes first of the season. “It felt so good; we've been waiting for that all year, and to come in the first round of the playoffs it means something to us,” said Osborne, who recorded six tackles, three quarterback pressures, and a sack to go along with his fumble recovery.

“We practiced so hard this week trying to get a shutout, and we played as hard as we could and got one,” said Wilson, who had eight tackles and one pressure to go with his interception.

“Our defense played exceptionally well, and our offense was real good for the conditions,” summarized Traylor. “Our coaches did a wonderful job. Those guys did a good job of preparing, and our kids are very mature and they played real well. It was a great win.”


Mirror Photo / Mary Laschinger Kirby
GILMER’S MARLON GRANVILLE pulls free of one tackle and eyes the ‘Jacks seeking to stop him. Granville made the first down and later ran a fumble in for a touchdown as the Buckeyes scored 21 points in the action-filled third quarter. Gilmer defeated Diboll 54-0.


Mirror Photo / Mary Laschinger Kirby
BUCKEYES CLOSE in as Prentiss Bell (18), Braylon Webb and J.T. Beecham watch as Vance Green (8) and Marlon Granville bring down Diboll’s Kendal Jackson. The Black Flag Defense notched its first shutout of 2008.

Video:

Josh Thompson’s 19-yard run (called back).
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 24-yard pass to Prentiss Bell.
Kedon Franklin's 23-yard run.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 3-yard TD run.
Jeremy Jackson's 9-yard TD run.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 23-yard screen pass to Gus Osborne.
Marlon Granville's 21-yard run.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 5-yard TD run.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 10-yard run (called back).
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 20-yard screen pass to Josh Thompson.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 15-yard run (fumble at end of run recovered by Diboll).
A rare Buckeye punt. Freshman Luke Turner pins the Lumberjacks on their own 2 with a 40-yard punt with good hang time allowing coverage team to down it.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 12-yard pass to Jeremy Jackson.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 27-yard pass to Paul Chesnut.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 13-yard TD pass to Tristan Holt.
Marlon Granville's 16-yard run.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's 27-yard TD pass to Tristan Holt.
Jeremy Jackson's 26-yard run.
Josh Thompson's 11-yard run.
Jeremy Jackson's 22-yard run.
Marlon Granville's 26-yard run.
Darian "Stump" Godfrey's second 3-yard TD run of the game and third overall.

Galleries:

Buckeyes vs Diboll

Buckeyes VS. Diboll Lumberjacks

Individual Stats vs. Diboll (Bi-District)

Week Eleven – 11/14/2008

PASSING
Godfrey 13 of 20 for 190 yards, 2 TD’S
TOTAL 13 of 20 for 190 yards, 2 TD’S

RECEIVING
Holt 3 rec, 50 yards, 2 TD’S
Bell 3 rec, 31 yards
Chesnut 2 rec, 38 yards
Webb 1 rec, 12 yards
Thompson 1 rec, 20 yards
Jackson 1 rec, 11 yards
Franklin 1 rec, 4 yards
Osborne 1 rec, 24 yards
TOTAL 13 rec, 190 yards, 2 TD’S

RUSHING
Jackson 10 carries, 99 yards, 1 TD
Granville 9 carries, 111 yards
Godfrey, D. 8 carries, 34 yards, 3 TD’S
Thompson 4 carries, 15 yards
Beecham 3 carries, 13 yards
Miller 3 carries, 9 yards
Franklin 2 carries, 18 yards
TOTAL 39 carries, 299 yards, 4 TD’S

SUMMARY
First Downs 21
Passing 190 yards
Rushing 299 yards
TOTAL OFFENSE 489 YARDS

From the Waco Tribune-Herald:

Mexia 20, Crockett 18

Up next, Mexia



The Gilmer Buckeyes (10-1) will play the Mexia Black Cats (8-3) in the Area round of the Class 3A Division II playoffs on Friday night, Nov. 21, at 7:30 p.m. at Trinity Mother Frances Rose Stadium in Tyler. Gilmer is the visiting team and will wear white.

Superstitions collide

A "Black Cat" crossing one's path is thought to give you "bad luck."
A "Buckeye" on your person is thought to bring "good luck."
Obviously something's gotta give. May "good luck" prevail.

The winner will face the winner of the game Friday night between West Orange-Stark and Caldwell in The Woodlands.

Mexia vs. Gilmer Game Matchup

Mexia Black Cats

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How Gilmer came to be known as the Buckeyes

By JOE BLOUNT Long before the birth of Christ the buckeye was known to have medicinal value. The nutlike seed, found abundantly on shrubs here in East Texas, first got its notoriety as a curative agent from the Greco-Roman culture. Their god of medicine was Aesculapian. Even today botanical scientists place the buckeye within the genus Aesculus, recognize it as a member of the horse-chestnut family and are still highly puzzled by its many and varied phytochemicals. “Phyto,” as you may recall from biology, simply means “from plants.” There are a great number of antioxidants and maintenance chemicals found in the buckeye’s pulp. There are also many toxic compounds and several of the substances are downright poisonous. Early Greek docs would skin the buckeye and boil the endosperm, producing a brew that was taken internally. Most often, just as the case may still be today, the cure inevitably turned out to be worse than the disease. So now, we see that the buckeye is poisonous. We also b...

Padilla Poll Coaches 2023 All State Team

Padilla Poll Coaches 2023 All State Team 4A D-II Offensive Player of the Year Sr Will Henderson Gilmer RB Defensive Player of the Year Sr Aron Bell Gilmer LB Coach of the Year Alan Metzel Gilmer 1st Team Special Jr Brayden Pate Gilmer K Jr Ty WellMan Sanger P Sr Bryan Ramirez Ferris P Jr Josiah Groeneweg Glen Rose Ret 2nd Team Special Sr Jax Rodriguez Lago Vista K Sr Jack Atkinson Orange Grove Ret Sr Jadyn Forbes Sweetwater Ret Padilla Poll Coaches 2023 All State Team 4A D-II 1st Team Offense Sr Ozzie Andrade Bellville OL Sr Spencer Murphy Gilmer OL Sr Caden Romo Wimberley OL Jr Lucas Cano Gilmer OL Sr Jarom Pilcher Gilmer OL Sr Camden Raymond Glen Rose TE Sr Ta'Erik Tate Gilmer WR Jr Brendan Webb Gilmer WR Sr Jaydon Smith Ingleside WR Sr Dre'lon Miller Silsbee WR Jr Jos...

Video: Gilmer Buckeyes seeking community support to acquire championship rings