No. 3-ranked Mahomet-Seymour dominates Railer homecoming game with 63-14 
		win over LCHS
			
		 
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			 [September 19, 2022]  
			Lincoln–With perennial 
			Apollo Conference-favorite Mahomet-Seymour traveling to Lincoln for 
			the Railers’ homecoming game Friday night, the Railer faithful knew 
			Lincoln would have its hands full. 
		Ranked No. 3 in the Associated Press 
		Week 4 IHSA Class 5A poll, the Bulldogs scored its first touchdown on a 
		50-yard pass play just 17 seconds into the game and never looked back as 
		Mahomet-Seymour ran its record to 4-0, handing Lincoln a 63-14 defeat. 
		The loss dropped the Railers to 2-2 
		on the season and 1-1 in the Apollo Conference. 
		
		
		  
		Railer coach Matt Silkowski 
		In game planning for the contest, 
		Railer coach Matt Silkowski said that in order for Lincoln to compete 
		with the Bulldogs, he thought the Railers would need to utilize ball 
		control and maintain possession to keep the ball away from the potent 
		Mahomet-Seymour offensive attack. 
		
		
		  
		“We needed to be able to run the 
		ball and be able to sustain some drives,” he said. “That was what we 
		wanted to be able to do and limit their possessions and time of 
		possession as much as we could. At times, we did that; we had some 
		drives in the first quarter that were pretty good. We had some other 
		opportunities other times as well where things went pretty good for us. 
		They were just better than us.” 
		Following the initial 
		Mahomet-Seymour score on the pass play from senior quarterback Wyatt 
		Bohm to Quenton Rogers, Lincoln drove the ball to the Bulldogs’ 28-yard 
		line before Railer quarterback Darren Stevens was sacked on fourth down 
		to give the ball back to Mahomet-Seymour. 
		
		
		  
		Frank Sanders 
		Unable to find an open receiver on 
		the next play, Bohm scrambled for 25 yards for the Bulldogs to move the 
		ball into Railer territory. It felt as if Mahomet-Seymour was poised to 
		march the ball downfield for another score again, but the Railer defense 
		held, thanks in large part to a quarterback sack for a loss by sophomore 
		Frank Sanders. The Bulldogs turned the ball over on downs as Lincoln 
		tried to establish something offensively to build some momentum. It 
		wasn’t to be, however, as Lincoln went 3-and-out and punted the ball 
		back to the Bulldogs. 
		Mahomet-Seymour found its rhythm 
		offensively, as the Bulldogs mixed in a few running plays by Luke 
		Johnson with three completed passes on the drive by Bohm, the last of 
		which was a 34-yard touchdown strike to Rogers with 2:31 remaining in 
		the first quarter. 
		
		
		  
		
		
		  
		Isaac Decker 
		
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			Railer QB Darren Stevens 
            
			  
 
			 The Bulldogs regained possession 
			and added another touchdown before the first quarter ended to lead 
			21-0. 
			Lincoln got on the board in the 
			second quarter when Ki’on Carson ran the ball into the end zone from 
			the 6-yard line for his first of two touchdowns in the game. Angel 
			Haro kicked the extra point and the Railers trailed 21-7. 
			
			
			  
			Ki’on Carson 
			
			
			  
			Colbie Glenn 
			Lincoln’s other points did not 
			come until the fourth quarter on the final touchdown of the game for 
			both teams when Carson found the end zone on a 69-yard running play. 
			Haro converted the PAT and the final score was 63-14. 
			
			
			  
			Despite the deficit on the 
			scoreboard, Silkowski said he was proud of the team’s effort against 
			Mahomet-Seymour following Lincoln’s 26-14 loss to Jersey High School 
			from Jerseyville a week ago. 
			“We played with good effort,” he 
			said. “At times, we didn’t play with the best effort last week, 
			especially defensively, so we really wanted to see improvements in 
			that tonight. And I thought we played with better effort. We just 
			got beat tonight by better players at times, and you can’t coach 
			that.” 
			In addition, Silkowski said he 
			liked what he saw in terms of the Railers handling themselves in the 
			game and how players conducted themselves on the field in the heat 
			of battle during the contest against Mahomet-Seymour. 
			“I’m very happy with how we held 
			our composure,” Silkowski said. “I think they [Mahomet-Seymour] 
			played a very chirpy game, and our kids did a very good job of 
			keeping their cool and not playing the way they’re not coached to 
			play. They [Mahomey-Seymour] had a player ejected, and I think our 
			kids did a very good job of not retaliating. That’s all I asked them 
			to do: play with good effort, play the game the right way and don’t 
			do something that’s going to embarrass our program. 
			“Our kids played the game the 
			right way tonight, and I’m very happy for that.” 
			[Loyd Kirby] 
			Note: all statistics in this 
			story are unofficial. 
			
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