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October 31, 2009 | High School Huddle
 

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Saturday, October 31, 2009

28 local teams likely set for playoffs

The Ohio High School Athletic Association is scheduled to release its official football playoff pairings Sunday, Nov. 1, at about 2:30 p.m. Here are the local teams expected to be in:

Division I: Wayne, Centerville, Springfield

Division II: Tecumseh, Trotwood-Madison, West Carrollton, Wilmington

Division III: Tippecanoe, Bellefontaine, Chaminade Julienne, Monroe, Eaton, Shawnee

Division IV: Clinton-Massie, Alter, Valley View, Carlisle, Waynesville

Division V: Coldwater, West Liberty-Salem, Anna, St. Henry

Division VI: Ansonia, Lehman Catholic, Marion Local, Southeastern, Fort Loramie, Covington

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Before it even plays, Marshall is out

The Marshall High School football team hasn’t even finished its season, but in some ways, it’s already over.

Marshall will play Ponitz Tech tonight at Welcome Stadium to finish one of the more spectacular offensive regular seasons in recent area memory. In nine games, the Cougars have gained 5,073 yards rushing, an average of 563.6 per game.

Even though Marshall has won all of its nine games on the field, it forfeited its first three victories for using an ineligible player. That meant Marshall coaches and supporters watched several games Friday night knowing they needed some help to make the Division IV playoffs.

They didn’t get it. Coach Earl White discussed his disappointment this afternoon knowing that, even before his Cougars finished the season (likely at 7-3), they had no hope of a postseason.

“We’re very disappointed, extremely disappointed,” said White, who was calm and collected, having already accepted the news. “The playoffs is what you work for and strive for when you start lifting weights in January. You sell the kids on it, and we didn’t get in this year.

“You can’t say it was because of them, it was because of an administrative mistake. We think that we definitely belong there this year, we just have to sell the kids on, ‘Hey we didn’t lose on the field this year and have to go with that.’ “

In the past few weeks, as Marshall kept winning and watching other teams’ results, the coaches constantly checked computer points and projections while continuing to prepare their devastating rushing attack.

“It was like an addiction,” White said of eyeing other scores and scenarios.

Marshall, though, came up short. Because of that, one of the most effective rushing teams to ever play in Dayton — one that an opposing coach said “literally makes you sick to your stomach” to prepare for — won’t have a chance to match up against the state’s best and try to make its run.

“Everybody wanted to see us get in,” White said. “For the City of Dayton itself, struggles with academic things, anytime you can draw something positive, especially in football, a sport like no other, is good. There’s so much teamwork, so much community involvement, it can be very uplifting to the community.”

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