BLOOMINGTON -- Bloomington High School tailback
David Simmons heard the rumors about an inexperienced
linemen ahead of him, but he never once doubted them.
"I had confidence in our line the whole time,"
Simmons said. "We just had to get the line to have
confidence in (themselves)."
It was Simmons that gave the line confidence.
Behind his 235 rushing yards and a
bend-but-don't-break defense, the Purple Raiders won
their ninth consecutive season opener, 54-24, over
Danville at Fred Carlton Field Friday night.
"You know everybody thought that our line was a big
weakness," Simmons said, "but they stepped up and that
made me better."
Better may be an understatement.
Simmons' two touchdowns were scored on runs of 40 and
75 yards. The 5-foot-9 senior averaged 15.7 yards a
carry and had five runs of 10-or-more yards.
"The line stepped up," Simmons said.
That wasn't apparent after the first quarter.
The Vikings (0-1 overall and in the Big 12) opened
with a wide-open attack that left BHS baffled. Using a
mix a inside handoffs and precision passing, Danville
grabbed a 12-7 lead and gained 144 yards of total
offense after 12 minutes.
"The difficulty of facing a Danville team (is) we're
not certain of exactly what they're gonna run," BHS
coach Rigo Schmelzer said. "I don't think our
linebackers did a good job as far as getting to the
running back. They just sat or they didn't fill. They
looked like they were moving the ball pretty well
against us at the start."
But not the finish.
BHS (1-0, 1-0) scored 47 of the next 53 points to put
the game away. In the final three quarters, the Raiders
forced three turnovers and allowed Danville to average
just three plays-per-drive.
"We have a good base going," Schmelzer said.
The Raiders' two quarterbacks, senior Brent Holtz and
junior Stephen Esch, combined to go 8-of-10 for 110
yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions. Both
touchdowns were to tight end Ryan Kernes.
"It was a great job by the quarterbacks," said
Kernes, who caught four passes for 82 yards. "I've been
playing with (Holtz) a lot longer. I say I feel a little
more comfortable with him, but I've been catching the
ball from Esch the whole summer. It's not a big
difference."
Despite the victory, Schmelzer knows his team still
has some deficiencies that need attention.
"It's a start. I think we have a lot of things we
need to work on to be a good team to take advantage of
strengths," said Schmelzer, whose team faces Normal
Community next Friday at 7 p.m. at Hancock Stadium. "I
think that's going to take us seven or eight games to
get this. We have a good base going.
"We got the first one and we take them one at a time.
This is a good start."