Sage Hill charged up
Bryce Alderton
For much of last season, Sage Hill School junior Keya Manshadi
watched his teammates do battle each week while he recovered from a
fracture above his ankle.
But in Sage’s football opener Friday, Manshadi put on a show for
all to see, including visiting Midway Baptist.
Manshadi had the game of a career, scoring four touchdowns,
including two on interception returns totaling 130 yards, to power
the Lightning to a 42-14 nonleague victory over Midway Baptist on a
sunny, warm afternoon.
Sage Hill sophomore tailback Don Ayres also gave the Patriots
fits, scoring on touchdown runs of 72 and 57 yards, part of his 179
rushing yards on nine carries.
The 6-foot, 175-pound Manshadi tallied touchdown runs of 54 and 17
yards and finished with 98 rushing yards on eight carries, helping
Sage Hill amass 332 yards on the ground and score 42 consecutive
points after Midway Baptist jumped in front, 6-0, on Adam Williams’
5-yard burst with 5:04 left in the first quarter.
The quick-strike Lightning scored 28 points off six Midway Baptist
turnovers -- three fumbles and three interceptions -- to exact
revenge on the Patriots, who prevailed, 48-15, when the teams met in
last season’s opener.
A more mature, better-conditioned Sage Hill team took the field
Friday, Coach Tom Monarch said.
“This year, the intensity is up 50% and we’ve worked extra hard,
conditioning-wise, to get through all last four quarters,” Monarch
said. “We have a group of juniors and [four] seniors that are still
relatively young, but they’re not freshmen and sophomores anymore.”
The Lightning scored four touchdowns in nine offensive drives and
the longest of those was five plays.
A three-play, 66-yard drive, capped by Ayres’ 57-yard touchdown
burst up the middle, put Sage ahead, 7-6, and there was no looking
back.
The drive was set up when junior defensive end Michael Morgan
stripped a Midway ballcarrier and junior middle linebacker Bryan
Kornsweit recovered to give Sage a first down on the Patriots’
31-yard line.
Monarch was also particularly pleased with Sage’s defense after
Midway scored its first touchdown.
Linebackers Nick Sohl, Ayres, freshman Dylan Milstein and
Kornsweit began filling holes and issued some punishing blows on
Patriot ballcarriers.
“When we can hear helmets popping on the sidelines, we are very
happy,” Monarch said.
Sohl forced and recovered the same fumble while Milstein also
induced a fumble.
The stingy Lightning defense also halted a Midway drive in the
third quarter, when the Patriots, trailing, 35-6, had a
first-and-goal on the Sage 4-yard line.
O’Hare and Manshadi, playing cornerback, each stopped Midway
ballcarriers for 3-yard losses. After an incomplete pass, Manshadi
capped his scoring surge by cutting across the middle for the
interception and then outracing everyone for the aforementioned
97-yard TD scamper.
Manshadi, who missed half the season and only then saw minimal
playing time a year ago, was eager to get back on the field, healthy.
“It’s horrible to watch from the sidelines, but I love everything
now about our team, our [offensive] line, and our freshman are
stepping up and making big plays,” Manshadi said. “[Friday] our team
stepped up.”
Freshman quarterback Jamie McGee completed 3 of 9 passes for 46
yards, 30 of those yards to senior tight end Stephen Hancock.
“This year is going to be amazing,” Manshadi said.
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