8/31/11

This Week in Benedictine Football History

Week 2

September 2, 1994

Benedictine 30, Sandusky 7

Sandusky – This 30-7 Bengals victory was significant in a number of ways from a historical perspective to Benedictine fans.

For the first time in nearly four decades, Augie Bossu was not on the sidelines as the Bengals field boss. He had stepped down in the spring of 1994 at the age of 77 as Ohio’s winningest football coach with 308-117-28 record.

Highlighting the debut of Al Hodakievic as the Benedictine head coach was a record-setting performance by 6-5 junior wide receiver Kevin Coffey and near record-breaking feat by senior quarterback Joel Jelinek.

Hodakievic ’72 became the first Benedictine alumnus to head the football program.

Coffey caught five passes from Jelinek for a single-game school record 258 yards. Three of those five passes were for touchdowns… all in the third quarter. Meanwhile, Jelinek was racking up the third best school single-game passing yardage with 295 on only six completions.

Benedictine took the early 6-0 lead as Jelinek scored on a one-yard run in the first quarter.

Sandusky took a 7-6 lead at halftime and held on until the Bengals big third quarter.

In the span of less than nine minutes, the Jelinek-to-Coffey passing show lifted the Bengals to victory.

Coffey’s first score came with 9:30 left in the third on a pass play into the end zone that bounced off the Sandusky defender’s shoulder pads and into the hands of the lanky receiver.

The second touchdown of the quarter came with 6:14 left when Coffey slipped behind the pass coverage and caught the long pass. Coffey stumbled briefly, regained his footing and outran the defense to score on a 73-yard pass play.

After recovering a fumble on their own 13, the Bengals wasted little time reaching the end zone again. Jelinek threw downfield and Coffey caught it and dashed into the end zone to complete an 87-yard pass play. That scoring play came with 1:14 left in the third.

Benedictine had gone from a 7-6 deficit to a 24-7 lead in less than one quarter.

The Bengals added a final touchdown late in the game when fullback Ogun Brewer went 70 yards.

Coffey’s yardage surpassed the old record set by Benedictine Hall of Famer Rick King ’82 of 235 yards (from quarterback Paul Hrisko ’82) in a 27-0 win over Youngstown Rayen.

Interestingly, the Bengals did not convert one extra point in the game.

Immediately after the game, one visiting scout suggested in the press box that someone should offer Coffey a scholarship right there on the field.

Coffey eventually did accept a football scholarship to the University of Virginia where he ranks 12th all-time with 1,347 yards on 75 receptions for an average of 18.0 and scored 15 touchdowns.

He later signed as a free agent with the National Football League’s Carolina Panthers in 2000 but did not make the regular season roster.

In ’94, Benedictine finished the regular season with an 8-2 record and ran off two wins in the Division IV state playoffs over Youngstown Mooney (33-13) and Brookfield (26-6) before falling to Orrville 54-27.

Bossu came out of “retirement” to coach the Bengals freshmen football team for many more years until the mid-2000’s. His first freshman team in 1994 finished with an 8-0-1 record. As juniors, many of those players would help the Bengals win the 1996 Division III state title.

Wally Mieskoski ’71

Benedictine Football Historian

8/28/11

Benedictine Rallies to Defeat Boardman

Week One
August 27, 2011

Benedictine 31, Boardman 30

Bedford – A large crowd at Bedford’s Bearcat Stadium watched as Benedictine used big plays to notch a well-earned 31-30 victory over Division I playoff contender and first-time opponent Boardman.
The game also marked the Bengals coaching debut of Ben Malbasa, who was named as the new Benedictine coach in December 2010.
It was an evening of big performances by the Bengals.
Senior back Bryan Lacey gave the Bengals the go-ahead touchdown with a nifty 28-yard run with 9:38 left in the game to make it 31-28. It was Lacey’s third touchdown of the night. He was the Bengals leading rusher with 69 yards on 13 carries and also caught a pair of passes for 61 yards. His first touchdown provided the spark that the Bengals needed.
Junior Dan Piascik led the Bengals passing attack throwing for a career best and fourth-highest single-game total in school history of 307 yards and two touchdowns.
Freshman placekicker Toby Leahy got the Bengals on the scoreboard first with a 33-yard field goal just 1:05 into the game.
Boardman bounced back by scoring three touchdowns to take a 21-3 lead with 11:56 left in the second.
Lacey caught a 54-yard scoring pass from Piascik with 11:03 left in the second to bring the Bengals to 21-10. That scoring play allowed the Bengals get back into the game. Then, Piascik connected with junior Marshall Howell with a 90-yard scoring pass to close the gap to 21-17. That is the second-longest pass play in school history.
After the Bengals defense held Boardman at the 36, the Spartans punted to the Bengals six.
On the first play, Piascik hit senior Mike Roberts with a 72-yard pass that took the ball to the Boardman 22. Later, Lacey scored on a nine-yard run to give the Bengals a 24-21 lead with 5:21 left in the third. That drive covered 94 yards and took only six plays.
Early in the fourth, Boardman regained the lead at 28-24 on a Devin Campbell 13-yard run that completed an 11-play, 80-yard drive.
That set up Lacey’s winning 28-yard score just 72 seconds later.
Boardman got its final two points as Benedictine punter Alex Naida took an intentional safety by running out of the end zone.
Some key stats:
First downs: Boardman 20, Benedictine 16
Fumbles Lost: Boardman 3, Benedictine 1
Passing Yards: Benedictine 307, Boardman 134
Rushing Yards: Boardman 243, Benedictine 99

# # #

Wally Mieskoski ‘71

8/23/11

This Week in Benedictine Football History

Week One

Benedictine 48, West Tech 0

August 29, 1980

Benedictine’s All-Ohio tailback Kevin Richardson scored on a 63-yard run on the game’s first play from scrimmage to lead the Bengals to an easy 48-0 win over West Tech. Richardson, who would later play defensive back at Ohio State, added a 71-yard touchdown run in the first quarter. Junior Alex Szocs kicked six of seven extra point conversions in the game.

The Bengals exploded for 21 points in the second with Mike O’Neill scoring on a 42-yard punt return, Richardson adding a two-yard run and Scott Noble catching a 12-yard pass from Paul Hrisko. After helping the Bengals to a 35-0 halftime lead, Richardson sat out most of the second half.

Chris Federico’s 43-yard punt return in the third gave the Bengals a 41-0 lead. Then in the fourth, Noble finished out the scoring on a three-yard run.

It was the second straight 48-0 season opening victory for the Bengals. In 1979, they defeated Ashtabula Harbor by the same score.

After going through the regular season with an 8-1-1 mark, the Bengals rolled in the state Division III playoffs with wins over Warren John F. Kennedy 43-15 and Orrville 7-0. In the state championship game, Benedictine won its second state playoff title defeating Hamilton Badin 9-3 to complete an 11-1-1 season.

Wally Mieskoski ’71

Benedictine Football Historian

8/19/11

Bengals Conclude Preseason with Scrimmage at Cleveland Heights

The wait for week one of the high school football season is finally complete. This morning the Bengals begin game-week preparations for Boardman after a spirited scrimmage with Cleveland Heights on Thursday night.

The scrimmage saw a stiff Bengal defense create two key turnovers, interceptions by Alex Naida and Bryan Lacey, as well as several big plays from the offense, including touchdown runs by Lacey and Marshall Howell behind the blocking of Peter Cvijanovic, Joe Nawalaniec, Luke Becker, David Porter, and William Cloud.

Among the highlights of the scrimmage was the manner in which the Bengals recovered from a quick Heights score with 1:50 remaining in the preview to rattle off a 5 play, 75 yard drive to regain the lead.


8/13/11

Bengals Complete Second Week of Camp with Successful Scrimmage

Week two of training camp concluded as the Bengals participated in a three-way scrimmage with Canton McKinley and Ravenna on Saturday. Defensively, the Bengals fared very well as the defensive line, led by Joe Nawalaniec and Rich Allen, proved strong in stopping the run and highly effective in rushing the passer. Offensively, Bryan Lacey continued his strong preseason with several impressive runs, and Mike Roberts contributed an impressive 85 yard TD reception.

This week the Bengals will complete their final two-a-days before scrimmaging Cleveland Heights on Thursday. Then, the Bengals will turn their attention to their Week 1 opponent, Youngstown Boardman.


8/7/11

Blue-White Scrimmage a Success

Players, coaches, families, and friends enjoyed an exciting end to the first week of practice as players completed Saturday's practice with an hour-long intrasquad scrimmage. During the hour, the Bengals showed progress and promise while running almost 90 plays. The scrimmage concluded when senior captain, Kelvin Blake intercepted a pass to clinch the win for the White team.

After the scrimmage the Hut-2-Hike Club hosted a cook-out for the players. The team would like to express special thanks to all of the people who made the day such a success.


8/2/11

Two-a-Days are Underway for Bengals

Intensity increases as players add equipment throughout the first week of double sessions, and Tuesday marked the end of the required period of helmet-only practices. On Wednesday and Thursday players will practice in shells before wearing full gear on Friday in preparation for the first full-contact day on Saturday.

The Bengals will mark the first day of full contact with a modified intrasquad scrimmage. After meetings and individual hitting drills, the Offense and Defense will compete in a series of situations. Family members and alums are welcome, and the Hut-2-Hike club will host a cook-out after the practice. The club asks that those staying for the cookout bring a side dish to share.