Saturday, September 01, 2012
Sports News

Lincoln defeats Lanphier in soggy home opener

By Justin Tierney

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[September 01, 2012]  Not even the remnants of a hurricane could dampen a Lincoln Railer football player's spirits on Friday night.

Lincoln prevailed over Springfield Lanphier, winning by a final tally of 22-14 in their home opener at Handlin Field and continuing a lengthy streak of entertaining football games between the two teams. For the second year in a row, Lincoln emerged with the victory.

With what's left of Hurricane Isaac making a seemingly happy home over Handlin Field for much of the evening, most would have said conditions were somewhere between miserable and undesirable.

Just not the Railers.

Nope. Not at all.

For them, the night -- the win -- was perfect.

"This is the greatest feeling there is," said a clearly emotional Dane Eimer(31), Lincoln‘s senior safety and a team captain. "That's why we play the game. It's why we play the game. That's all I can really say about it."

Railer coach Andy McDonald enjoyed the win as well, saying hard-fought victories are what makes all the hard work pay off for his players and assistant coaches.

"With our tough conference, every win is a major win for us," said McDonald. "I'm very excited for our guys. A win like this is a reward for the hard work that they've put in during the offseason, this summer and preseason. The guys played their hearts out.

"We battled past adverse situations with fumbles, dropped snaps and bad timing on some penalties. But we kept our heads up and kept playing hard."

Indeed, the sloppy weather created issues for both teams. Slick footballs made simply carrying the ball a sometimes difficult task, let alone passing downfield.

Lincoln finished the game with two lost fumbles, but given the nasty conditions, it was a satisfactory performance.

"It was hard," said senior running back Cody Heidbreder, whose 19-yard fourth-quarter touchdown extended Lincoln's one-point lead into a far more comfortable eight-point advantage. "Handoffs were quite hard, and holding on to the ball was the hardest part, but, you've just got to do it."

Aside from limiting their turnovers, the key to the Railer victory was a shutout performance by the defense in the second half, after a first half of struggling to contain crafty Lion quarterback Freddie Lomprez.

Lomprez led Lanphier's spread option attack to two first-half touchdowns, bewildering Lincoln defenders with a variety of fake handoffs, cutbacks and spin moves. With the Railers struggling to wrap up Lomprez, the Lions led 14-7 at halftime.

But, after some adjustments at intermission, the second half belonged to Lincoln.

"(At halftime) we emphasized some of the things we've worked on all year as far as tackling, getting to the ball and breaking down, being athletic, and not running by him," said McDonald of the second-half performance. "We made some adjustments with our linebackers a little bit, focusing them more on the quarterback, and that helped.

"In the first half, the quarterback was tearing us up. We knew we had to do something in the second half, and we ended up shutting him out the second half."

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"The quarterback was very slippery," said Eimer, who intercepted a Lomprez pass late in the fourth quarter to effectively secure a Railer victory. "It just took me, personally, the whole first quarter to realize that. I have to break down every time I try to tackle somebody. He was just very slippery."

Lincoln also benefited greatly from outstanding special teams play from sophomore Chris Duong.

Duong boots kickoffs for the varsity and, in that role, serves as the last line of defense on kickoff coverage. Not just once, but twice, Duong made what appeared to be touchdown-saving tackles of Lion kickoff returners.

McDonald was relieved that Duong came up big. Had he not, the outcome could have been far different.

"He's only a sophomore. He's an athletic kid and a very tough kid too," said McDonald of Duong. "It was great to see him step in and play that role for us. He really saved us on a couple of those that could have been big, big runbacks."

The Railer ground game rebounded from a slow start in the season-opening loss to Jacksonville, combining for 228 yards on 49 attempts.

A trio of seniors were the primary ball carriers for Lincoln. Heidbreder led Lincoln with 11 attempts for 89 yards and a touchdown, while Anthony Cannon finished with 16 attempts and 78 yards. Conner Schmidt added 12 attempts for 60 yards while also catching two passes for 41 yards, including hauling in a 37-yard touchdown pass in the first quarter.

Junior quarterback Austin Krusz finished the game 3 for 4 with 55 passing yards. Krusz also scored a 1-yard go-ahead touchdown midway through the third quarter on a quarterback sneak.

The aim now for the Railers is to build on this week's victory and develop some momentum heading into next week's battle with Springfield Southeast.

"We want to carry it on to next week," said Heidbreder. "Now we want to keep a win streak going."

[By JUSTIN TIERNEY]

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Justin Tierney's Railer football reports

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