Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 19 Nov 1986, p. 26

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la t:*\-;e-b&l)A' Lay &Qtlj\-ru Vg.’"ili"i i» Zy.:an‘i\rt ‘v’*'v‘m Richard O‘Brien Chronicle Staff WCI junior Vikings running back Steve Dean made it look easy when he broke loose for a 71â€"yard touchdown on Vikings‘ second offensive play Saturday afternoon at Seagram Stadium. _ _ Richard O‘Brien Chronicle Staff Here‘s something those people who tell Cinderella stories usually fail to mention. Those glass slippers can break when you try them on. So it went for Waterloo collegiate‘s senior football Vikings when they were trying to win the Waterloo County high school championship Saturday afternoon at Seagram Stadium. Had they done so, they would have completed a fiveâ€"game winning streak after falling to 1â€"3 at one point in the season. Along with a convert from Mark Reichert, Dean gave Vikings an early 7â€"0 lead in their Waterloo County high school championship game with St. Jerome‘s Lions. o But if Vikings expected things to be easy after that, they should know better. It was their fourth consecutive trip to the championship game, which is a credit to the coaching staff, but they have no trophies to show for it. All that stood in their way was a late drive by Cameron Heights Golden Gaels which finished with a nineâ€"yard touchdown pass to Vic Robichaud from quarterback Jamie Patton with 26 seconds remaining to give the ‘"*We‘re the only team that has been able to score against them," said Viking coach John Mcintyre. Vikings lost 16â€"14 to Lions in a regular season game this year. â€" â€" o _ Once again, they had to settle for second place as they lost 20â€"8 to Lions, a team which has gone undefeated for two complete seasons. ‘"One of their (Lions) strong points is they adjust during the game They shut us down in the second half." â€" Golden Gaels a 13â€"11 victory. Vikings had a chance to build on their early lead on their second drive, but Greg Jesse couldn‘t gather in a pass after eluding coverage and Dean had another long touchdown romp called back for a holding penalty. â€" â€" â€" _ _ Penalties and turnovers eventually hurt Vikings, who gave up the ball threetimes on fumbles and once on an interception. â€" ‘"‘We must have accumulated 150 yards in penalties," said Mcintyre, "which we‘ve just never done during the regular seaâ€" Penalties started to take their toll when Reichert, who had given Vikings their eighth point on a missed field goal, was called for a face mask infraction that kept Lions‘ offensive series going. . â€" That infraction, along with an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty picked up by another Viking, eventually led to Lions‘ first major, a threeâ€"yard run by Luke Dolan. hn Cl l Junior Vikings fare no better WCI seniors lose a heartbreaker * 0S CCUC~"_â€" Mark Reichert (right) of WCi‘s junior Vikings was caught using an illegal means of (Continued on pa stopping Willy Schill of St. Jerome‘s in the second quarter. Richard O‘Brien photo A key player all day on offence and defence, Grossman kicked a convert as well as a 33â€"yard field goal. Another field goal try went wide for a single point. o Grossman scored all of Vikings‘ points, starting with a 40â€"yard touchdown on an interception after Gaels had taken a 6â€"0 lead on a fourth down, one yard touchdown by Patton against Vikings‘ stubborn defence. Gaels had kept their drive alive with a long fourth down pass to Andrew Scharschmidt in a desperate situaâ€" Vikings last play of the game was also a desperation move. Fred Grossman had to try a field goal from beyond his normal range but the kick was blocked. _ ‘‘We felt confident we could hold them on that last drive but we had a couple kids slip on a play and it just wasn‘t meant to be, I guess," said Vikings‘ coach Dary ‘"‘Waterloo has a fantastic football team," said Bell. "I know they‘re disappointed to lose but there‘s no way we ran over them. I‘m proud of Jamie Patton. He didn‘t have a good day but he showed a lot of character on the final drive." . Easton. ‘"But we did it to other people and now we know what it feels like." Golden Gaels had threatened on two occasions earlier in the fourth quarter but both drives ended when they turned over the ball on fumbles. Easton and Golden Gaels coach Ron Bell agreed that quarterback Rob Boug had a good day for Vikings, yet Golden Gaels defence was unyielding. Vikes‘ touchdown was a defensive effort and their field goal resulted from a fumble recovery by Gord Bean in the second quarter. Vikings had led 10â€"6 at halftime.

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